Journal article

Vacillating about media bias: Changing one's mind intermittently within a network of political allies and opponents

NKY Low, A Melatos

Physica A Statistical Mechanics and Its Applications | Published : 2022

Abstract

One form of long-term behavior revealed by opinion dynamics simulations is intermittency, where an individual cycles between eras of stable, constant beliefs and turbulent, fluctuating beliefs, for example when inferring the political bias of a media organization. We explore this phenomenon by building an idealized network of Bayesian learners, who infer the bias of a coin from observations of coin tosses and peer pressure from political allies and opponents. Numerical simulations reveal that three types of network structure lead to three different types of intermittency, which are caused by agents “locking out” opponents from sure beliefs in specific ways. The probability density functions ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

Parts of this research are supported by the University of Melbourne Science Graduate Scholarship-2020, Australia, the Australian Research Council (ARC) Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav) (project number CE170100004) and ARC, Australia Discovery Project DP170103625.