Abstract

Voter model dynamics in complex networks are vulnerable to adversarial attacks. In particular, the voting outcome can be inverted by adding extremely small perturbations that are strategically generated in social networks, even when one opinion is dominant over the other. However, the mitigation of adversarial attacks on the voter model dynamics in complex networks has not been thoroughly investigated. Thus, we examined network structures that could mitigate adversarial attacks using model networks and real-world networks, considering that the network structure affects the voter model dynamics. Numerical simulations demonstrated that the heterogeneity of node degrees in the networks (degree heterogeneity) significantly mitigates adversarial attacks. In particular, for complex networks with a power-law degree distribution , the mitigation effect is significant for . However, the mitigation effect of the degree heterogeneity was relatively weak for large and dense networks. The degree correlation and clustering in the networks exhibited almost no mitigation effect. The results enhance our understanding of how opinion dynamics and collective decision-making are distorted in social networks and may be useful for considering defense strategies against adversarial attacks.

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