Every day, people inform themselves and create their opinions on social networks. Although these platforms have promoted the access and dissemination of information, they may expose readers to manipulative, biased, and disinformative content-co-causes of polarization/radicalization. Moreover, recommendation algorithms, intended initially to enhance platform usage, are likely to augment such phenomena, generating the so-called Algorithmic Bias. In this work, we propose two extensions of the Algorithmic Bias model and analyze them on scale-free and Erdos-Renyi random network topologies. Our first extension introduces a mechanism of link rewiring so that the underlying structure co-evolves with the opinion dynamics, generating the Adaptive Algorithmic Bias model. The second one explicitly models a peer-pressure mechanism where a majority-if there is one-can attract a disagreeing individual, pushing them to conform. As a result, we observe that the co-evolution of opinions and network structure does not significantly impact the final state when the latter is much slower than the former. On the other hand, peer pressure enhances consensus mitigating the effects of both "close-mindedness" and algorithmic filtering.

Modeling algorithmic bias : simplicial complexes and evolving network topologies

Pansanella, Valentina
;
2022

Abstract

Every day, people inform themselves and create their opinions on social networks. Although these platforms have promoted the access and dissemination of information, they may expose readers to manipulative, biased, and disinformative content-co-causes of polarization/radicalization. Moreover, recommendation algorithms, intended initially to enhance platform usage, are likely to augment such phenomena, generating the so-called Algorithmic Bias. In this work, we propose two extensions of the Algorithmic Bias model and analyze them on scale-free and Erdos-Renyi random network topologies. Our first extension introduces a mechanism of link rewiring so that the underlying structure co-evolves with the opinion dynamics, generating the Adaptive Algorithmic Bias model. The second one explicitly models a peer-pressure mechanism where a majority-if there is one-can attract a disagreeing individual, pushing them to conform. As a result, we observe that the co-evolution of opinions and network structure does not significantly impact the final state when the latter is much slower than the former. On the other hand, peer pressure enhances consensus mitigating the effects of both "close-mindedness" and algorithmic filtering.
2022
Settore INF/01 - Informatica
Opinion dynamics; complex networks; algorithmic bias; social-influence; confidence; conformity; emergence; consensus; minority; media
   SoBigData++: European Integrated Infrastructure for Social Mining and Big Data Analytics
   SoBigData-PlusPlus
   European Commission
   Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
   871042

   Social Explainable Artificial Intelligence
   SAI
   CHIST-ERA
   CHIST-ERA-19-XAI-010

   HumanE AI Network
   HumanE-AI-Net
   European Commission
   Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
   952026
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11384/135522
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