569 research outputs found
Social network markets: the influence of network structure when consumers face decisions over many similar choices
In social network markets, the act of consumer choice in these industries is
governed not just by the set of incentives described by conventional consumer
demand theory, but by the choices of others in which an individual's payoff is
an explicit function of the actions of others. We observe two key empirical
features of outcomes in social networked markets. First, a highly right-skewed,
non-Gaussian distribution of the number of times competing alternatives are
selected at a point in time. Second, there is turnover in the rankings of
popularity over time. We show here that such outcomes can arise either when
there is no alternative which exhibits inherent superiority in its attributes,
or when agents find it very difficult to discern any differences in quality
amongst the alternatives which are available so that it is as if no superiority
exists. These features appear to obtain, as a reasonable approximation, in many
social network markets. We examine the impact of network structure on both the
rank-size distribution of choices at a point in time, and on the life spans of
the most popular choices. We show that a key influence on outcomes is the
extent to which the network follows a hierarchical structure. It is the social
network properties of the markets, the meso-level structure, which determine
outcomes rather than the objective attributes of the products.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
Modelling creative innovation
The economic concept of rationality seems inappropriate in the context of creative innovation, because of its assumption that the tastes and preferences of agents are fixed. The concept of copying, of imitating the behaviour of others, has equal claim to the description 'rational' in an innovative context. Models of ‘binary choices with externalities’ are predicated on copying and potentially show us not only why most innovations fail, but also why big social changes do not necessarily require big causes. In the ‘Long-tail’ world of a huge range of choice, however, many choices are not ‘binary, either-or’. In the long-tail world, popular choices tend to become more popular, but not forever, as innovation drives a constant turnover in the popularity rankings. A very simple model of ‘neutral’ copying with occasional originality of choice can explain real-world patterns of long-tail distributions under continual turnover
Neutral evolution and turnover over centuries of English word popularity
Here we test Neutral models against the evolution of English word frequency
and vocabulary at the population scale, as recorded in annual word frequencies
from three centuries of English language books. Against these data, we test
both static and dynamic predictions of two neutral models, including the
relation between corpus size and vocabulary size, frequency distributions, and
turnover within those frequency distributions. Although a commonly used Neutral
model fails to replicate all these emergent properties at once, we find that
modified two-stage Neutral model does replicate the static and dynamic
properties of the corpus data. This two-stage model is meant to represent a
relatively small corpus (population) of English books, analogous to a `canon',
sampled by an exponentially increasing corpus of books in the wider population
of authors. More broadly, this mode -- a smaller neutral model within a larger
neutral model -- could represent more broadly those situations where mass
attention is focused on a small subset of the cultural variants.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
Cultural values predict national COVID-19 death rates
National responses to a pandemic require populations to comply through personal behaviors that occur in a cultural context. Here we show that aggregated cultural values of nations, derived from World Values Survey data, have been at least as important as top-down government actions in predicting the impact of COVID-19. At the population level, the cultural factor of cosmopolitanism, together with obesity, predict higher numbers of deaths in the first two months of COVID-19 on the scale of nations. At the state level, the complementary variables of government efficiency and public trust in institutions predict lower death numbers. The difference in effect between individual beliefs and behaviors, versus state-level actions, suggests that open cosmopolitan societies may face greater challenges in limiting a future pandemic or other event requiring a coordinated national response among the population. More generally, mass cultural values should be considered in crisis preparations
Cultural prerequisites of socioeconomic development
In the centuries since the enlightenment, the world has seen an increase in socioeconomic development, measured as increased life expectancy, education, economic development and democracy. While the co-occurrence of these features among nations is well documented, little is known about their origins or co-evolution. Here, we compare this growth of prosperity in nations to the historical record of cultural values in the twentieth century, derived from global survey data. We find that two cultural factors, secular-rationality and cosmopolitanism, predict future increases in GDP per capita, democratization and secondary education enrollment. The converse is not true, however, which indicates that secular-rationality and cosmopolitanism are among the preconditions for socioeconomic development to emerge
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