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Examining Bilingual Language Control Using the Stroop Task
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Cross-border political competition.

Jose Segovia-Martin1,2, Óscar Rivero3,4

  • 1School of Collective Intelligence, M6 Polytechnic University, Rabat, Morocco.

Plos One
|May 29, 2024
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Cross-border information significantly influences election outcomes by affecting ideology spread. Foreign support can shift results, and US voter turnout is projected to increase due to enhanced party recruitment.

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Area of Science:

  • Political Science
  • Computational Social Science
  • Mathematical Modeling

Background:

  • Increasing global news exposure concentrates within ideological groups.
  • Understanding cross-border information's impact on ideology diffusion is crucial.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To model the non-linear dynamics of cross-border ideology spread.
  • To analyze the influence of foreign support on national election outcomes.
  • To project future trends in voter turnout and political disaffection.

Main Methods:

  • Developed a non-linear mathematical model for two-ideology spread.
  • Employed deterministic and stochastic differential equations.
  • Utilized Runge-Kutta numerical methods and fitted models to US election data (1932-2020).

Main Results:

  • Small changes in minority ideology influence can alter global political equilibrium.
  • Cross-border influence is a fundamental factor in election outcomes, independent of domestic capacity.
  • US voter turnout is predicted to outpace non-voter growth due to increased partisan recruitment.

Conclusions:

  • Cross-border ideological influence is a powerful determinant of political dynamics.
  • Foreign support can sway national elections.
  • Political disaffection may decrease as parties enhance recruitment of non-partisans.