Abstract

In a connected world where people influence each other, what can cause a globalized monoculture, and which measures help to preserve the coexistence of cultures? Previous research has shown that factors such as homophily, population size, geography, mass media, and type of social influence play important roles. In the present paper, we investigate for the first time the impact that institutions have on cultural diversity. In our first three studies, we extend existing agent-based models and explore the effects of institutional influence and agent loyalty. We find that higher institutional influence increases cultural diversity, while individuals' loyalty to their institutions has a small, preserving effect. In three further studies, we test how bottom-up and top-down processes of institutional influence impact our model. We find that bottom-up democratic practices, such as referenda, tend to produce convergence towards homogeneity, while top-down information dissemination practices, such as propaganda, further increase diversity. In our last model—an integration of bottom-up and top-down processes into a feedback loop of information—we find that when democratic processes are rare, the effects of propaganda are amplified, i.e., more diversity emerges; however, when democratic processes are common, they are able to neutralize or reverse this propaganda effect. Importantly, our models allow for control over the full spectrum of diversity, so that a manipulation of our parameters can result in preferred levels of diversity, which will be useful for the study of other factors in the future. We discuss possible mechanisms behind our results, applications, and implications for political and social sciences.

Highlights

  • Models of culture and social influenceIn light of inherent tensions in international integration [1] and a contemporary trend towards cultural policy [2,3], factors that impact cultural globalization and the preservation of diversity have been a recent focus in computational modeling

  • Extending on the main result obtained in experiment A, we found that various amounts of institutional influence (α > = 0.7) impact the extent of diversity that can be obtained and can be used to control the number of cultural regions that will emerge

  • Frequent democratic processes led to fewer, larger cultural regions, while frequent propaganda led to more, smaller cultural regions

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Models of culture and social influenceIn light of inherent tensions in international integration [1] and a contemporary trend towards cultural policy [2,3], factors that impact cultural globalization and the preservation of diversity have been a recent focus in computational modeling. Formal mathematical models of social influence illustrated that, when everyone in a network is connected, a global monoculture is inevitable—all cultures converge to a global consensus and become homogenous [4,10,11]. Among them artificial societies [5,12], have since been adopted to facilitate the study of patterns of cultural transmission. They have enhanced our understanding of how diversity and global consensus emerge in societies, and how societies can fluctuate between one and the other, exploring these dynamics by introducing various factors to social influence to find ways by which diversity can be preserved

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call