Can extremism guarantee pluralism?
Floriana Gargiulo, Alberto Mazzoni

TL;DR
This paper explores how opinion dynamics and social network structures interact, showing that segregation and selective interaction among extremists can sustain pluralism and prevent consensus.
Contribution
It introduces a model combining opinion formation with social segregation, demonstrating how extremist clustering with ongoing interaction maintains opinion diversity.
Findings
Extremist segregation can lead to multiple opinion clusters.
Unrestricted interaction results in opinion uniformity.
Ongoing interaction among extremist clusters sustains pluralism.
Abstract
Many models have been proposed to explain opinion formation in groups of individuals; most of these models study opinion propagation as the interaction between nodes/agents in a social network. Opinion formation is a complex process and a realistic model should also take into account the important feedbacks that the opinions of the agents have on the structure of the social networks and on the characteristics of the opinion dynamics. In this paper we will show that associating to different agents different kinds of interconnections and different interacting behaviours can lead to interesting scenarios, like the coexistence of several opinion clusters, namely pluralism. In our model agents have opinions uniformly and continuously distributed between two extremes. The social network is formed through a social aggregation mechanism including the segregation process of the extremists that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpinion Dynamics and Social Influence · Complex Network Analysis Techniques · Evolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation
