25,804 research outputs found
Ultimate Fate of Constrained Voters
We determine the ultimate fate of individual opinions in a
socially-interacting population of leftists, centrists, and rightists. In an
elemental interaction between agents, a centrist and a leftist can become both
centrists or both become leftists with equal rates (and similarly for a
centrist and a rightist). However leftists and rightists do not interact. This
interaction step between pairs of agents is applied repeatedly until the system
can no longer evolve. In the mean-field limit, we determine the exact
probability that the system reaches consensus (either leftist, rightist, or
centrist) or a frozen mixture of leftists and rightists as a function of the
initial composition of the population. We also determine the mean time until
the final state is reached. Some implications of our results for the ultimate
fate in a limit of the Axelrod model are discussed.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, 2-column revtex format; for submission to J.
Phys. A. Final version for JPA; very minor change
Scaling in Tournaments
We study a stochastic process that mimics single-game elimination
tournaments. In our model, the outcome of each match is stochastic: the weaker
player wins with upset probability q<=1/2, and the stronger player wins with
probability 1-q. The loser is eliminated. Extremal statistics of the initial
distribution of player strengths governs the tournament outcome. For a uniform
initial distribution of strengths, the rank of the winner, x_*, decays
algebraically with the number of players, N, as x_* ~ N^(-beta). Different
decay exponents are found analytically for sequential dynamics, beta_seq=1-2q,
and parallel dynamics, beta_par=1+[ln (1-q)]/[ln 2]. The distribution of player
strengths becomes self-similar in the long time limit with an algebraic tail.
Our theory successfully describes statistics of the US college basketball
national championship tournament.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, empirical study adde
On The Structure of Competitive Societies
We model the dynamics of social structure by a simple interacting particle
system. The social standing of an individual agent is represented by an
integer-valued fitness that changes via two offsetting processes. When two
agents interact one advances: the fitter with probability p and the less fit
with probability 1-p. The fitness of an agent may also decline with rate r.
From a scaling analysis of the underlying master equations for the fitness
distribution of the population, we find four distinct social structures as a
function of the governing parameters p and r. These include: (i) a static
lower-class society where all agents have finite fitness; (ii) an
upwardly-mobile middle-class society; (iii) a hierarchical society where a
finite fraction of the population belongs to a middle class and a complementary
fraction to the lower class; (iv) an egalitarian society where all agents are
upwardly mobile and have nearly the same fitness. We determine the basic
features of the fitness distributions in these four phases.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figure
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