info:eu-repo/semantics/article
A model for the competition between political mono-polarization and bi-polarization
Fecha
2020-06Registro en:
Saintier, Nicolas Bernard Claude; Pinasco, Juan Pablo; Vazquez, Federico; A model for the competition between political mono-polarization and bi-polarization; American Institute of Physics; Chaos; 30; 6; 6-2020; 1-18
1054-1500
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Saintier, Nicolas Bernard Claude
Pinasco, Juan Pablo
Vazquez, Federico
Resumen
We investigate the phenomena of political bi-polarization in a population of interacting agents by means of a generalized version of the model introduced by Vazquez et al. [Phys. Rev. E 101, 012101 (2020)] for the dynamics of voting intention. Each agent has a propensity p in [0, 1] to vote for one of two political candidates. In an iteration step, two randomly chosen agents i and j with respective propensities p i and p j interact, and then p i either increases by an amount h > 0 with a probability that is a nonlinear function of p i and p j or decreases by h with the complementary probability. We assume that each agent can interact with any other agent (all-to-all interactions). We study the behavior of the system under variations of a parameter q ≥ 0 that measures the nonlinearity of the propensity update rule. We focus on the stability properties of the two distinct stationary states: mono-polarization in which all agents share the same extreme propensity (0 or 1), and bi-polarization where the population is divided into two groups with opposite and extreme propensities. We find that the bi-polarized state is stable for q < q c, while the mono-polarized state is stable for q > q c, where q c (h) is a transition value that decreases as h decreases. We develop a rate equation approach whose stability analysis reveals that q c vanishes when h becomes infinitesimally small. This result is supported by the analysis of a transport equation derived in the continuum h → 0 limit. We also show by Monte Carlo simulations that the mean time τ to reach mono-polarization in a system of size N scales as τ ∼ N α at q c, where α is a nonuniversal exponent that depends on h.