A Public Opinion Propagation Model for Human-Made Disasters Considering Herd Behavior and Psychological Involvement
Yi Zhang, Ting Ni, Wanjie Tang

TL;DR
This paper proposes a model to understand how public opinions spread during human-made disasters, emphasizing the roles of herd behavior and psychological involvement.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel SIR-based model incorporating psychological involvement and herd behavior in public opinion propagation.
Findings
Herd behavior and psychological involvement significantly influence public opinion spread more than contact rate.
Reducing herd behavior and emotional resonance can suppress opinion diffusion effectively.
The model provides insights for managing public opinion through entropy and information theory.
Abstract
This study investigates the dynamics of information diffusion and uncertainty evolution in online public opinion systems under human-made disasters. A variant of the SIR model considering individual psychological involvement and group herd behavior is proposed. The theoretical analysis derives the propagation equilibrium points and the propagation threshold and further examines the stability of the system. The results indicate that the transmission rate, immunity rate, and herd behavior coefficient are key parameters influencing the dynamics of public opinion propagation. The simulation results validate the theoretical findings and provide a visualization of the sensitivity of the key parameters. Finally, an empirical case study is conducted to verify the effectiveness and applicability of the proposed model. The results indicate that controlling contact rate, reducing herd behavior,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpinion Dynamics and Social Influence · Complex Network Analysis Techniques · Misinformation and Its Impacts
