Opinion dynamics: Rise and fall of political parties
暂无分享,去创建一个
We analyze the evolution of political organizations using a model in which agents change their opinions via two competing mechanisms. Two agents may interact and reach consensus, and additionally, individual agents may spontaneously change their opinions by a random, diffusive process. We find three distinct possibilities. For strong diffusion, the distribution of opinions is uniform and no political organizations (parties) are formed. For weak diffusion, parties do form and furthermore, the political landscape continually evolves as small parties merge into larger ones. Without diffusion, a pattern develops: parties have the same size and they possess equal niches. These phenomena are analyzed using pattern formation and scaling techniques.
[1] L. Rosenhead. Conduction of Heat in Solids , 1947, Nature.
[2] B. M. Fulk. MATH , 1992 .
[3] G. Haag. Book review: Sociodynamics–A systematic approach to mathematical modelling in the social sciences, by Wolfgang Weidlich , 2000 .
[4] Wolfgang Weidlich,et al. Sociodynamics: a Systematic Approach to Mathematical Modelling in the Social Sciences , 2000 .
[5] J. Urry. Complexity , 2006, Interpreting Art.