TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel opinion dynamics model incorporating media and influencer roles, revealing how their strategies and influence affect opinion fragmentation and stability in social discourse.
Contribution
The paper develops a new model capturing media and influencer effects on opinion dynamics, including strategies for follower gain and counteracting fragmentation.
Findings
Influencers can cause short-lived opinion clusters.
Moving to extreme positions helps influencers gain followers.
Counter-strategies can prevent opinion landscape fragmentation.
Abstract
Digital communication has made the public discourse considerably more complex, and new actors and strategies have emerged as a result of this seismic shift. Aside from the often-studied interactions among individuals during opinion formation, which have been facilitated on a large scale by social media platforms, the changing role of traditional media and the emerging role of "influencers" are not well understood, and the implications of their engagement strategies arising from the incentive structure of the attention economy even less so. Here we propose a novel opinion dynamics model that accounts for these different roles, namely that media and influencers change their own positions on slower time scales than individuals, while influencers dynamically gain and lose followers. Numerical simulations show the importance of their relative influence in creating qualitatively different…
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