Abstract
The sudden outbreak of COVID-19 at the end of 2019 has had a huge impact on people's lives all over the world, and the overwhelmingly negative information about the epidemic has made people panic for the future. This kind of panic spreads and develops through online social networks, and further spreads to the offline environment, which triggers panic buying behavior and has a serious impact on social stability. In order to quantitatively study this behavior, a two-layer propagation model of panic buying behavior under the sudden epidemic is constructed. The model first analyzes the formation process of individual panic from a micro perspective, and then combines the Susceptible-Infected-Recovered (SIR) Model to simulate the spread of group behavior. Then, through simulation experiments, the main factors affecting the spread of panic buying behavior are discussed. The experimental results show that: (1) the dissipating speed of individual panics is related to the number of interactions and there is a threshold. When the number of individuals involved in interacting is equal to this threshold, the panic of the group dissipates the fastest, while the dissipation speed is slower when it is far from the threshold; (2) The reasonable external information release time will affect the occurrence of the second panic buying, meaning providing information about the availability of supplies when an escalation of epidemic is announced will help prevent a second panic buying. In addition, when the first panic buying is about to end, if the scale of the second panic buying is to be suppressed, it is better to release positive information after the end of the first panic buying, rather than ahead of the end; and (3) Higher conformity among people escalates panic, resulting in panic buying. Finally, two cases are used to verify the effectiveness and feasibility of the proposed model.
Highlights
At the end of 2019, COVID-19 swept the world, causing many panic buying behaviors
This study aims to quantitatively explore the formation and propagation mechanism of panic buying under a sudden epidemic
This paper constructs a panic buying propagation model based on SIR model and discuss the influence of individual needs, panic, individual conformity, interaction number, and released time of external information, and verifies feasibility and effectiveness of model by two empirical cases
Summary
At the end of 2019, COVID-19 swept the world, causing many panic buying behaviors. The long-term epidemic and the overwhelmingly negative news have made people panic about the future. Driven by this panic, panic buying has been rampant everywhere. Panic buying seriously endangers social order and environmental safety, and causes insufficient social supply. It is of important theoretical and practical significance to analyze the key factors affecting panic buying and explore the underlying reasons for its formation
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