Contrarian effects and echo chamber formation in opinion dynamics
Henrique Ferraz de Arruda, Alexandre Benatti, Filipi Nascimento Silva,, Cesar Henrique Comin, Luciano da Fontoura Costa

TL;DR
This paper investigates how contrarian opinions and network rewiring influence the formation of echo chambers in opinion dynamics, revealing that strong underdog effects and limited reconnection reduce echo chamber formation.
Contribution
It introduces a model combining the Underdog effect with adaptive network rewiring, analyzing their impact on echo chamber emergence in multi-opinion scenarios.
Findings
Strong underdog effect balances opinions
Limited reconnection reduces echo chamber size
Rewiring based on opinion similarity influences network modularity
Abstract
The relationship between the topology of a network and specific types of dynamics unfolding in networks constitutes a subject of substantial interest. One type of dynamics that has attracted increasing attention because of its several potential implications is opinion formation. A phenomenon of particular importance, known to take place in opinion formation, is echo chambers' appearance. In the present work, we approach this phenomenon, while emphasizing the influence of contrarian opinions in a multi-opinion scenario. To define the contrarian opinion, we considered the Underdog effect, which is the eventual tendency of people to support the less popular option. We also considered an adaptation of the Sznajd dynamics with the possibility of friendship rewiring, performed on several network models. We analyze the relationship between topology and opinion dynamics by considering two…
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