Exploring the Role of Randomization on Belief Rigidity in Online Social Networks
Adiba Mahbub Proma, Neeley Pate, Raiyan Abdul Baten, Sifeng Chen,, James Druckman, Gourab Ghoshal, and Ehsan Hoque

TL;DR
This study empirically investigates how increasing randomness in online social networks can reduce belief rigidity and promote exposure to diverse opinions, potentially mitigating echo-chamber effects.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence that network randomization influences belief diversity and suggests new intervention strategies for social media platform design.
Findings
Randomization positively influences belief change.
Diverse content recommendations increase opinion variety.
Randomized networks can help break echo-chambers.
Abstract
People often stick to their existing beliefs, ignoring contradicting evidence or only interacting with those who reinforce their views. Social media platforms often facilitate such tendencies of homophily and echo-chambers as they promote highly personalized content to maximize user engagement. However, increased belief rigidity can negatively affect real-world policy decisions such as leading to climate change inaction and increased vaccine hesitancy. To understand and effectively tackle belief rigidity on online social networks, designing and evaluating various intervention strategies is crucial, and increasing randomization in the network can be considered one such intervention. In this paper, we empirically quantify the effects of a randomized social network structure on belief rigidity, specifically examining the potential benefits of introducing randomness into the network. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpinion Dynamics and Social Influence · Complex Network Analysis Techniques · Misinformation and Its Impacts
