Abstract
Collective decision making processes lie at the heart of many social, political, and economic challenges. The classical voter model is a well-established conceptual model to study such processes. In this work, we define a form of adaptive (or coevolutionary) voter model posed on a simplicial complex, i.e., on a certain class of hypernetworks or hypergraphs. We use the persuasion rule along edges of the classical voter model and the recently studied rewiring rule of edges towards like-minded nodes, and introduce a peer-pressure rule applied to three nodes connected via a 2-simplex. This simplicial adaptive voter model is studied via numerical simulation. We show that adding the effect of peer pressure to an adaptive voter model leaves its fragmentation transition, i.e., the transition upon varying the rewiring rate from a single majority state into a fragmented state of two different opinion subgraphs, intact. Yet, above and below the fragmentation transition, we observe that the peer pressure has substantial quantitative effects. It accelerates the transition to a single-opinion state below the transition and also speeds up the system dynamics towards fragmentation above the transition. Furthermore, we quantify that there is a multiscale hierarchy in the model leading to the depletion of 2-simplices, before the depletion of active edges. This leads to the conjecture that many other dynamic network models on simplicial complexes may show a similar behavior with respect to the sequential evolution of simplices of different dimensions.
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