Mixbiotic society measures: Assessment of community well-going as living system
Takeshi Kato, Jyunichi Miyakoshi, Tadayuki Matsumura, Ryuji Mine,, Hiroyuki Mizuno, Yasuo Deguchi

TL;DR
This paper introduces new measures inspired by living phenomena to evaluate community communication dynamics, demonstrating their effectiveness in assessing societal well-being and community types through simulations and real data analysis.
Contribution
It proposes novel, interpretable measures for community communication patterns based on cellular automata and reaction diffusion models, validated with real-world datasets.
Findings
Measures effectively distinguish different community states.
Mixism measure correlates with community well-being.
Measures outperform conventional static analysis methods.
Abstract
Social isolation is caused by the impoverishment of community (atomism) and fragmentation is caused by the enlargement of in-group (mobism), both of which can be viewed as social problems related to communication. To solve these problems, the philosophical world has proposed the concept of "mixbiotic society," in which individuals with freedom and diverse values mix and mingle to recognize their respective "fundamental incapability" each other and sublimate into solidarity. Based on this concept, this study proposes new mixbiotic society measures to evaluate dynamic communication patterns with reference to classification in cellular automata and particle reaction diffusion that simulate living phenomena. Specifically, the hypothesis of measures corresponding to the four classes was formulated, and the hypothesis was validated by simulating the generation and disappearance of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpinion Dynamics and Social Influence · Complex Network Analysis Techniques · Evolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation
