Pareto-Improvement-Driven Opinion Dynamics Explaining the Emergence of Pluralistic Ignorance
Yuheng Luo, Chuanzhe Zhang, Qingsong Liu, Hai Zhu, Wenjun Mei

TL;DR
This paper introduces a multi-objective opinion dynamics model based on Pareto improvements, explaining how pluralistic ignorance can emerge and persist in social networks, with implications for promoting truthful consensus.
Contribution
It proposes a novel multi-objective game framework for opinion dynamics, capturing distinct social and cognitive costs, and analytically explores conditions for truth emergence and strategies for consensus.
Findings
Moderately sparse, well-mixed networks reduce pluralistic ignorance.
No network guarantees truthful consensus without initial truth expression.
The model explains the emergence of pluralistic ignorance through Pareto improvements.
Abstract
Opinion dynamics has recently been modeled from a game-theoretic perspective, where opinion updates are captured by individuals' cost functions representing their motivations. Conventional formulations aggregate multiple motivations into a single objective, implicitly assuming that these motivations are interchangeable. This paper challenges that assumption and proposes an opinion dynamics model grounded in a multi-objective game framework. In the proposed model, each individual experiences two distinct costs: social pressure from disagreement with others and cognitive dissonance from deviation from the perceived truth. Opinion updates are modeled as Pareto improvements between these two costs. This fwork provides a parsimonious explanation for the emergence of pluralistic ignorance, where individuals may agree on something untrue even though they all know the underlying truth. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpinion Dynamics and Social Influence · Complex Network Analysis Techniques · Game Theory and Applications
