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The Impact of External Sources on the Friedkin-Johnsen Model

The Impact of External Sources on the Friedkin-Johnsen Model

来源:Arxiv_logoArxiv
英文摘要

To obtain a foundational understanding of timeline algorithms and viral content in shaping public opinions, computer scientists started to study augmented versions of opinion formation models from sociology. In this paper, we generalize the popular Friedkin--Johnsen model to include the effects of external media sources on opinion formation. Our goal is to mathematically analyze the influence of biased media, arising from factors such as manipulated news reporting or the phenomenon of false balance. Within our framework, we examine the scenario of two opposing media sources, which do not adapt their opinions like ordinary nodes, and analyze the conditions and the number of periods required for radicalizing the opinions in the network. When both media sources possess equal influence, we theoretically characterize the final opinion configuration. In the special case where there is only a single media source present, we prove that media sources which do not adapt their opinions are significantly more powerful than those which do. Lastly, we conduct the experiments on real-world and synthetic datasets, showing that our theoretical guarantees closely align with experimental simulations.

Charlotte Out、Sijing Tu、Stefan Neumann、Ahad N. Zehmakan

计算技术、计算机技术

Charlotte Out,Sijing Tu,Stefan Neumann,Ahad N. Zehmakan.The Impact of External Sources on the Friedkin-Johnsen Model[EB/OL].(2025-04-11)[2025-05-01].https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.08413.点此复制

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