(Noah E. Friedkin, Anton V. Proskurnikov, Roberto Tempo, Sergey E. Parsegov) : Center for Control, Dynamical-Systems and Computation and Department of Sociology (University of California, Santa Barbara, CA, USA), Engineering and Technology Institute (ENTEG, University of Groningen, Netherlands), 3The Institute of Problems of Mechanical Engineering of Russian Academy of Sciences (IPME RAS) and ITMO University (Saint Petersburg, Russia), National Research Council (CNR-IEIIT, Torino, Italy),
V.A. Trapeznikov Institute of Control Sciences of the Russian Academy of Sciences (ICS RAS, Moscow, Russia)!
Abstract.
Breakthroughs have been made in algorithmic approaches to understanding how individuals in a group influence each other to reach a consensus. However, what happens to the group consensus if it depends on several statements, one of which is proven false? Here, we show how the existence of logical constraints on beliefs affect the collective convergence to a shared belief system and, in contrast, how an idiosyncratic set of arbitrarily linked beliefs held by a few may become held by many.