Fashion, Cooperation, and Social Interactions
Zhigang Cao, Haoyu Gao, Xinglong Qu, Mingmin Yang, Xiaoguang Yang

TL;DR
This paper models social interactions in fashion using a hybrid game theory approach on networks, revealing that simple local interactions can significantly promote cooperation and lead to complex geographic patterns.
Contribution
It introduces a novel hybrid social interaction model combining coordination and anti-coordination games on networks, analyzing its impact on cooperation and pattern formation.
Findings
High levels of cooperation achieved through local interactions.
Synchronization degree influences cooperation negatively.
Emergence of geographic patterns and phase transitions.
Abstract
Fashion plays such a crucial rule in the evolution of culture and society that it is regarded as a second nature to the human being. Also, its impact on economy is quite nontrivial. On what is fashionable, interestingly, there are two viewpoints that are both extremely widespread but almost opposite: conformists think that what is popular is fashionable, while rebels believe that being different is the essence. Fashion color is fashionable in the first sense, and Lady Gaga in the second. We investigate a model where the population consists of the afore-mentioned two groups of people that are located on social networks (a spatial cellular automata network and small-world networks). This model captures two fundamental kinds of social interactions (coordination and anti-coordination) simultaneously, and also has its own interest to game theory: it is a hybrid model of pure competition and…
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