Field evidence of social influence in the expression of political preferences: the case of secessionist flags in Barcelona
Antonio Parravano, Jos\'e A. Noguera, Jordi Tena, Paula Hermida

TL;DR
This study provides direct behavioral evidence of social influence affecting political expression, specifically the display of secessionist flags in Barcelona, demonstrating how local majority opinions and influence mechanisms shape public displays.
Contribution
It offers novel observational data on social influence dynamics in natural settings, focusing on political expression through flag display in Barcelona.
Findings
Flag density correlates with pro-independence majority in districts.
Flags tend to cluster more than random distribution suggests.
Local influence mechanisms promote flag clustering on facades.
Abstract
Different models of social influence have explored the dynamics of social contagion, imitation, and diffusion of different types of traits, opinions, and conducts. However, few behavioral data indicating social influence dynamics have been obtained from direct observation in `natural' social contexts. The present research provides that kind of evidence in the case of the public expression of political preferences in the city of Barcelona, where thousands of citizens supporting the secession of Catalonia from Spain have placed a Catalan flag in their balconies. We present two different studies. 1) In July 2013 we registered the number of flags in 26% of the the city. We find that there is a large dispersion in the density of flags in districts with similar density of pro-independence voters. However, we find that the density of flags tends to be fostered in those electoral district where…
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