Social network architecture and the maintenance of deleterious cultural traits

How have changes in communications technology affected the way that misinformation spreads through a population and persists? To what extent do differences in the architecture of social networks affect the spread of misinformation, relative to the rates and rules by which individuals transmit or eli...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the Royal Society interface 2012-05, Vol.9 (70), p.848-858
Hauptverfasser: Yeaman, Sam, Schick, Alana, Lehmann, Laurent
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creator Yeaman, Sam
Schick, Alana
Lehmann, Laurent
description How have changes in communications technology affected the way that misinformation spreads through a population and persists? To what extent do differences in the architecture of social networks affect the spread of misinformation, relative to the rates and rules by which individuals transmit or eliminate different pieces of information (cultural traits)? Here, we use analytical models and individual-based simulations to study how a ‘cultural load’ of misinformation can be maintained in a population under a balance between social transmission and selective elimination of cultural traits with low intrinsic value. While considerable research has explored how network architecture affects percolation processes, we find that the relative rates at which individuals transmit or eliminate traits can have much more profound impacts on the cultural load than differences in network architecture. In particular, the cultural load is insensitive to correlations between an individual's network degree and rate of elimination when these quantities vary among individuals. Taken together, these results suggest that changes in communications technology may have influenced cultural evolution more strongly through changes in the amount of information flow, rather than the details of who is connected to whom.
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subjects Computer Simulation
Cultural Evolution
Culture
Diffusion
Epidemic Spread
Humans
Information Dissemination - methods
Maladaptive Culture
Models, Theoretical
Social Learning
Social Networking
Susceptible–infected–susceptible
Telecommunications
title Social network architecture and the maintenance of deleterious cultural traits
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