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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Global mass media, like directed opinion influence, promote social consensus and prevent network fragmentation in adaptive societies. This study explores the interplay between external fields and network adaptation dynamics.

Keywords:
adaptive networkscoevolutionary dynamicsglobal interactionsopinion formation

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Area of Science:

  • Social network analysis
  • Opinion dynamics
  • Complex systems

Background:

  • Adaptive networks are crucial for understanding social structures.
  • Opinion formation models often simplify real-world societal influences.
  • The impact of global interactions on network evolution needs further investigation.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the effects of external and autonomous global interaction fields on adaptive social networks.
  • To analyze the competition between global fields and adaptive rewiring in opinion formation.
  • To model societal dynamics influenced by mass media and cultural trends.

Main Methods:

  • Agent-based modeling of social agents with imitation rule.
  • Analysis of opinion formation dynamics on adaptive networks.
  • Parameter space exploration to study system behavior.

Main Results:

  • Global mass media, including directed opinion influence, foster consensus.
  • External fields counteract network fragmentation caused by coevolutionary dynamics.
  • The model demonstrates how media impacts social network structure.

Conclusions:

  • Global interaction fields are effective in promoting social cohesion.
  • Adaptive network dynamics can be stabilized by external societal influences.
  • Findings contribute to understanding opinion formation and social dynamics in complex systems.