Consensus formation in a lattice society

説明

Two variations of the voter's model are investigated to study the process of forming a spontaneous consensus in a society. The first type of modification to the basic voter's model, which we call Model-1, contains some majority-conscious members randomly chosen at every stage of simulation. It is observed that Model-1 always reaches a consensus (i.e. a stable region) even if some majority-conscious people are bound to oppose to the majority's choice as long as the number of those rebels are smaller than a critical value (12-15% of the whole population). When the number of rebels exceeds this critical value, the total opinion begins oscillating around zero. In the second type, which we call Model-2, individual members of the society are given certain characters in a minimal sense. Our calculation seems to indicate that Model-2 cannot reach any sort of consensus within a reasonable time interval. >

収録刊行物

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