• DocumentCode
    2714186
  • Title

    The Emergence of Social Consensus in Boolean Networks

  • Author

    Green, David G. ; Leishman, Tania G. ; Sadedin, Suzanne

  • Author_Institution
    Clayton Sch. of Inf. Technol., Monash Univ., Clayton, Vic.
  • fYear
    2007
  • fDate
    1-5 April 2007
  • Firstpage
    402
  • Lastpage
    408
  • Abstract
    Social order and unity require consensus among individuals about cooperation and other issues. Boolean network models (BN) help to explain the role played by peer interactions in the emergence of consensus. BN models represent a society as a network in which individuals are the nodes (with two states, e.g. agree/disagree) and social relationships are the edges. BN models highlight the influence of peer interactions on social cooperation, in contrast to models, such as prisoner´s dilemma, that focus on individual strategies. In BN models, the behavior that emerges from peer interactions differs in subtle, but important ways from equivalent mathematical models (e.g. Markov, dynamic systems). Despite their simplicity, BN models provide potentially important insights about many social issues. They confirm that there is an upper limit to the size of groups within which peer interactions can create and maintain consensus. In large social groups, a combination of peer interaction and enforcement is needed to achieve consensus. Social consensus is brittle in the face of global influences, such as mass media, with the peer network at first impeding the spread of alternative views, then accelerating them once a critical point is passed. BN models are sensitive both to the network topology, and to the degrees of influence associated with peer-peer connections
  • Keywords
    Boolean algebra; social sciences; Boolean network model; social consensus; social order; social relationships; Acceleration; Humans; Impedance; Information technology; Mathematical model; Network topology; Peer to peer computing; Social network services; Speech;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Artificial Life, 2007. ALIFE '07. IEEE Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Honolulu, HI
  • Print_ISBN
    1-4244-0701-X
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ALIFE.2007.367823
  • Filename
    4218913