Differentiation without Distancing. Explaining Bi-Polarization of Opinions without Negative Influence

Michael Maes*, Andreas Flache

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

194 Citations (Scopus)
300 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Explanations of opinion bi-polarization hinge on the assumption of negative influence, individuals' striving to amplify differences to disliked others. However, empirical evidence for negative influence is inconclusive, which motivated us to search for an alternative explanation. Here, we demonstrate that bi-polarization can be explained without negative influence, drawing on theories that emphasize the communication of arguments as central mechanism of influence. Due to homophily, actors interact mainly with others whose arguments will intensify existing tendencies for or against the issue at stake. We develop an agent-based model of this theory and compare its implications to those of existing social-influence models, deriving testable hypotheses about the conditions of bi-polarization. Hypotheses were tested with a group-discussion experiment (N = 96). Results demonstrate that argument exchange can entail bi-polarization even when there is no negative influence.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere74516
Number of pages17
JournalPLoS ONE
Volume8
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 27-Nov-2013

Keywords

  • SOCIAL-INFLUENCE
  • POLITICAL POLARIZATION
  • SELF-CATEGORIZATION
  • COMPUTATIONAL MODEL
  • ATTITUDE-CHANGE
  • TEAM COHESION
  • GROUP-SIZE
  • SHORT-TERM
  • DYNAMICS
  • DISSIMILARITY

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