Commitment versus persuasion in the three-party constrained voter model
Mauro Mobilia

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the competition between persuasion and commitment in a three-party voter model, revealing phase transitions and how demographic fluctuations influence consensus times in finite populations.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed analysis of the three-party constrained voter model, highlighting the effects of zealots and persuasion rates on consensus dynamics and phase transitions.
Findings
Continuous transition from coexistence to centrism dominance at critical zealot density
Consensus time scales exponentially with population size when below critical zealot density
Logarithmic scaling of consensus time when zealot density exceeds critical value
Abstract
In the framework of the three-party constrained voter model, where voters of two radical parties (A and B) interact with "centrists" (C and Cz), we study the competition between a persuasive majority and a committed minority. In this model, A's and B's are incompatible voters that can convince centrists or be swayed by them. Here, radical voters are more persuasive than centrists, whose sub-population consists of susceptible agents C and a fraction zeta of centrist zealots Cz. Whereas C's may adopt the opinions A and B with respective rates 1+delta_A and 1+delta_B (with delta_A>=delta_B>0), Cz's are committed individuals that always remain centrists. Furthermore, A and B voters can become (susceptible) centrists C with a rate 1. The resulting competition between commitment and persuasion is studied in the mean field limit and for a finite population on a complete graph. At mean field…
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