Networks and Identity Drive Geographic Properties of the Diffusion of Linguistic Innovation
Aparna Ananthasubramaniam, David Jurgens, Daniel M. Romero

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that both demographic identity and network topology are essential for accurately modeling the geographic diffusion of linguistic innovations, with each factor influencing different spatial transmission mechanisms.
Contribution
The paper introduces an agent-based model combining network and identity factors, validated against Twitter data, to better understand cultural diffusion patterns.
Findings
Network drives urban diffusion via weak ties.
Identity influences rural diffusion via strong ties.
Both factors are necessary for modeling national innovation spread.
Abstract
Adoption of cultural innovation (e.g., music, beliefs, language) is often geographically correlated, with adopters largely residing within the boundaries of relatively few well-studied, socially significant areas. These cultural regions are often hypothesized to be the result of either (i) identity performance driving the adoption of cultural innovation, or (ii) homophily in the networks underlying diffusion. In this study, we show that demographic identity and network topology are both required to model the diffusion of innovation, as they play complementary roles in producing its spatial properties. We develop an agent-based model of cultural adoption, and validate geographic patterns of transmission in our model against a novel dataset of innovative words that we identify from a 10% sample of Twitter. Using our model, we are able to directly compare a combined network + identity…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSocial Capital and Networks · Opinion Dynamics and Social Influence · Human Mobility and Location-Based Analysis
MethodsCounterfactuals Explanations · Diffusion
