Title: A Model of Opinion Dynamics Among Firms
1A Model of Opinion Dynamics Among Firms
Potentials of Complexity Science for Business,
Governments, and the Media Collegium Budapest,
03-05.08.2006
- Volker Barth,
- GELENA research group,
- Oldenburg University
2Outline
- Motivation/Background
- Basic model
- Opinion update based on external attribute
- Extended model
- Opinion update based on multiple attributes
- Conclusions
3Motivation
- Model the opinion spread in agent networks
- Drivers, mechanisms,?
- Empirical case studies on learning of
organisations with respect to sustainability
(GELENA project) - Imitation and copying (Consulting)
- Existence of networks
- Leader-follower dynamics within organisations
- Change agents, Time lags
4Motivation
- Existing studies
- Binary opinions
- Continuous opinions
- Opinion exchange often based on thresholds
(bounded confidence model)
Source Weisbuch et al., 2002
5Basic Model (1) Agents
- Personal attribute (authenticity, credibility)
ai 0.1, 0.2,1.0, Poisson
distributed - One meeting per time step
- Update opinion during meetingoB(t1) oB(t)
(oA(t) - oB(t)) aA g, for aA gt aB
6Basic Model (2) Social Networks
- Agents localised on lattice (torus)
- Social connections, no (direct) spatial meaning
- Limited environments (vonNeumann, Moore)
- Meet only agents within environment
s
7Agent Interaction Sample Result
- 49 agents, 5000 meetings, Von Neumann, range 2
8Agent Interaction Network effect
- 49 agents, 5000 meetings, average over 30 runs
9Basic Model Summary
- Agent opinions fluctuate between visible opinion
leaders - Greater visibility ? smaller opinion range
- Local opinion leaders
- Eccentric, but unchanged opinionsno impact on
mainstream - Extend opinion range
10Extended Model Firm Interaction
- Companies
- Firm opinion (follows CEO opinion)
- Firm attribute economic performance
- Agents now company executives
- Implicit Firm opinion and performance connected
- Executives update opinion upon
- average firm opinion of better-performing firms
oi oi(t) (ltoF,e(t)gt - oi(t) ) d - meetings with other executives
11Firm Interaction Sample Results
- 49 executives, 5000 meetings, von Neumann (s1)
12Firm Influence Parameter d
- 49 executives, 5000 meetings, avg. over 30 runs
13Firm Interaction Sample Results 2
- 49 executives, 5000 meetings, von Neumann (s1)
14Extended Model Summary
- Average firm opinion is attractor
- Convergence (Consensus) of mainstream depends
on interaction speed - Local opinion leaders still exist
- Small effects on mainstream in the short run
(fuzzy fringe) - Long-term attractor in the (very) long run ?
Global opinion leader
15Conclusions
- External attributes reflect actual opinion
formation of humans - Narrow consensus requires credible and widely
known proponents ? otherwise localised opinions,
wider range - Orientation on uniform opinions leads to narrow
consensus ? rules, values - Fixed, unbalanced opinions can shift mainstreams
in the long run ? Extremism
16 17Summary 1 Model
- Agents
- Individual property (authenticity) determines
individual opinion updating behaviour - Social network determines opinion exchange
- Companies
- Individual property (performance) important for
perception by other executives - Firm opinion follows executives opinion
- Executives opinion individual exchange
superposed by averaged firm opinion
18Summary 2 Findings
- Consensus as wide mainstreams depending on
- agents range of sight
- strength of firm opinion consideration
- Local opinion leaders
- primarily isolated eccentrics
- slight but ongoing impact on mainstream, when
multiple criteria matter
19Questions
- Can observed differences between sectors be
understood by different - dynamics of opinion formation of executives?
- dynamics of dissemination into organisations
(i.e. firms) ltgt transaction costs ? - network structures?
- Role of external influences?
- Consulting
- (Media)
20Visibility of firms
21Basic Model (2) Social Networks
- Agents localised on lattice
- Social connections, no (direct) spatial meaning
- Meet only known agents (visibility)
- Limited views possible (Moore, vonNeumann)
22Agent Interaction Network effect 1
- 49 agents, 5000 meetings, average over 30 runs
23Agent Interaction Network effect 2
- 49 agents, 5000 meetings, average over 30 runs
24Firm Influence Parameter d
- 49 executives, 5000 meetings, avg. over 30 runs