Logo image
Rumor clustering, consensus, and polarization: Dynamic social impact and self-organization of hearsay
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Rumor clustering, consensus, and polarization: Dynamic social impact and self-organization of hearsay

Nicholas DiFonzo, Martin J Bourgeois, Jerry Suls, Christopher Homan, Noah Stupak, Bernard P Brooks, David S Ross and Prashant Bordia
Journal of experimental social psychology, Vol.49(3), pp.378-399
05-2013

Abstract

Computer assisted group studies Dynamic Social Impact Theory Gossip Network configuration Polarization Rumor
The “bottom-up” self-organization of shared sense-making and group decision-making through rumor (unverified information statements in circulation) was investigated in two computer-mediated laboratory experiments on the effects of network clustering (i.e., structural “cliquishness”). Participants in 27 (Study 1) and 33 (Study 2) 16-person laboratory-created networks at three institutions discussed ambiguous situations (e.g., “a professor was found dead”) and then chose one of four possible rumors in a judgment task (e.g., “he was killed by an angry student”) to explain each situation. Static lattice, “ribbon” (street-like), “family” (connected clusters), random, and dynamic-random configurations were employed. Network clustering led to rumor clustering (emergence of homogenous pockets of rumor choices). There was also evidence for increased consensus, rumor persistence, and belief polarization. Belief polarization was amplified by rumor clustering and consensus. In addition, the extent to which “neighbors” were unified in their disagreement (versus agreement) with the participant tempered confidence increases and strongly affected the selection of rumors that “made the most sense.” Results explain rumor persistence and variation, document the role of patterns of connectivity and dynamic social influence processes in unverified collective beliefs, and suggest modification of Dynamic Social Impact Theory to include belief polarization mediated by emergent “echo chambers.” ► Network structure effects on emergent spatial patterns of rumor were studied. ► 16-person networks discussed ambiguous situations and individuals selected rumors. ► Homogenous clusters of rumors emerged moderated by network clustering. ► Rumor consensus (pluralities/majorities) increased and rumor beliefs polarized. ► Rumor clustering and consensus amplified rumor polarization (Echo Chamber effect).
url
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jesp.2012.12.010View
Published (Version of record) Open

Related links

Details

Logo image