Department of Psychology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, 08544, USA.
Princeton Neuroscience Institute, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, 08544, USA.
Nat Commun. 2019 Apr 5;10(1):1578. doi: 10.1038/s41467-019-09452-y.
From families to nations, what binds individuals in social groups is, to a large degree, their shared beliefs, norms, and memories. These emergent outcomes are thought to occur because communication among individuals results in community-wide synchronization. Here, we use experimental manipulations in lab-created networks to investigate how the temporal dynamics of conversations shape the formation of collective memories. We show that when individuals that bridge between clusters (i.e., bridge ties) communicate early on in a series of networked interactions, the network reaches higher mnemonic convergence compared to when individuals first interact within clusters (i.e., cluster ties). This effect, we show, is due to the tradeoffs between initial information diversity and accumulated overlap over time. Our approach provides a framework to analyze and design interventions in social networks that optimize information sharing and diminish the likelihood of information bubbles and polarization.
从家庭到国家,将个体凝聚在社会群体中的是在很大程度上他们共同的信仰、规范和记忆。这些新兴的结果被认为是由于个体之间的交流导致了社区范围内的同步。在这里,我们使用实验室创建的网络中的实验操作来研究对话的时间动态如何塑造集体记忆的形成。我们表明,当连接集群的个体(即桥接关系)在一系列网络交互中尽早进行交流时,与个体首先在集群内进行交互(即集群关系)相比,网络达到更高的记忆收敛。我们表明,这种效果是由于初始信息多样性和随时间积累的重叠之间的权衡。我们的方法提供了一个分析和设计社交网络干预措施的框架,以优化信息共享并降低信息泡沫和极化的可能性。