204 research outputs found
Eminence Grise Coalitions: On the Shaping of Public Opinion
We consider a network of evolving opinions. It includes multiple individuals
with first-order opinion dynamics defined in continuous time and evolving based
on a general exogenously defined time-varying underlying graph. In such a
network, for an arbitrary fixed initial time, a subset of individuals forms an
eminence grise coalition, abbreviated as EGC, if the individuals in that subset
are capable of leading the entire network to agreeing on any desired opinion,
through a cooperative choice of their own initial opinions. In this endeavor,
the coalition members are assumed to have access to full profile of the
underlying graph of the network as well as the initial opinions of all other
individuals. While the complete coalition of individuals always qualifies as an
EGC, we establish the existence of a minimum size EGC for an arbitrary
time-varying network; also, we develop a non-trivial set of upper and lower
bounds on that size. As a result, we show that, even when the underlying graph
does not guarantee convergence to a global or multiple consensus, a generally
restricted coalition of agents can steer public opinion towards a desired
global consensus without affecting any of the predefined graph interactions,
provided they can cooperatively adjust their own initial opinions. Geometric
insights into the structure of EGC's are given. The results are also extended
to the discrete time case where the relation with Decomposition-Separation
Theorem is also made explicit.Comment: 35 page
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