241 research outputs found
Emergence of Leadership in Communication
We study a neuro-inspired model that mimics a discussion (or information
dissemination) process in a network of agents. During their interaction, agents
redistribute activity and network weights, resulting in emergence of leader(s).
The model is able to reproduce the basic scenarios of leadership known in
nature and society: laissez-faire (irregular activity, weak leadership, sizable
inter-follower interaction, autonomous sub-leaders); participative or
democratic (strong leadership, but with feedback from followers); and
autocratic (no feedback, one-way influence). Several pertinent aspects of these
scenarios are found as well---e.g., hidden leadership (a hidden clique of
agents driving the official autocratic leader), and successive leadership (two
leaders influence followers by turns). We study how these scenarios emerge from
inter-agent dynamics and how they depend on behavior rules of agents---in
particular, on their inertia against state changes.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figure
Hidden Markov models for the activity profile of terrorist groups
The main focus of this work is on developing models for the activity profile
of a terrorist group, detecting sudden spurts and downfalls in this profile,
and, in general, tracking it over a period of time. Toward this goal, a
-state hidden Markov model (HMM) that captures the latent states underlying
the dynamics of the group and thus its activity profile is developed. The
simplest setting of corresponds to the case where the dynamics are
coarsely quantized as Active and Inactive, respectively. A state estimation
strategy that exploits the underlying HMM structure is then developed for spurt
detection and tracking. This strategy is shown to track even nonpersistent
changes that last only for a short duration at the cost of learning the
underlying model. Case studies with real terrorism data from open-source
databases are provided to illustrate the performance of the proposed
methodology.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/13-AOAS682 the Annals of
Applied Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aoas/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Understanding confounding effects in linguistic coordination: an information-theoretic approach
We suggest an information-theoretic approach for measuring stylistic
coordination in dialogues. The proposed measure has a simple predictive
interpretation and can account for various confounding factors through proper
conditioning. We revisit some of the previous studies that reported strong
signatures of stylistic accommodation, and find that a significant part of the
observed coordination can be attributed to a simple confounding effect - length
coordination. Specifically, longer utterances tend to be followed by longer
responses, which gives rise to spurious correlations in the other stylistic
features. We propose a test to distinguish correlations in length due to
contextual factors (topic of conversation, user verbosity, etc.) and
turn-by-turn coordination. We also suggest a test to identify whether stylistic
coordination persists even after accounting for length coordination and
contextual factors
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