Miranda Manuel, Pereda María, Sánchez Angel, Estrada Ernesto
Instituto de Física Interdisciplinar y Sistemas Complejos IFISC (UIB-CSIC), Palma de Mallorca 07122, Illes Balears, Spain.
Grupo de Investigación Ingeniería de Organización y Logística (IOL), Departamento Ingeniería de Organización, Administración de empresas y Estadística, Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingenieros Industriales, Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Madrid 28006, Spain.
PNAS Nexus. 2024 Oct 1;3(10):pgae409. doi: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae409. eCollection 2024 Oct.
A fundamental feature for understanding the diffusion of innovations through a social group is the manner in which we are influenced by our own social interactions. It is usually assumed that only direct interactions, those that form our social network, determine the dynamics of adopting innovations. Here, we test this assumption by experimentally and theoretically studying the role of direct and indirect influences in the adoption of innovations. We perform experiments specifically designed to capture the influence that an individual receives from their direct social ties as well as from those socially close to them, as a function of the separation they have in their social network. The results of 21 experimental sessions with more than 590 participants show that the rate of adoption of an innovation is significantly influenced not only by our nearest neighbors but also by the second and third levels of influences an adopter has. Using a mathematical model that accounts for both direct and indirect interactions in a network, we fit the experimental results and determine the way in which influences decay with social distance. The results indicate that the strength of peer pressure on an adopter coming from its second and third circles of influence is approximately two-third and one-third, respectively, relative to their closest neighbors. Our results strongly suggest that the adoption of an innovation is a complex process in which an individual feels significant pressure not only from their direct ties but also by those socially close to them.
理解创新在社会群体中传播的一个基本特征是我们受自身社会互动影响的方式。通常认为只有直接互动,即那些构成我们社交网络的互动,才决定采用创新的动态过程。在此,我们通过实验和理论研究直接影响和间接影响在创新采用中的作用来检验这一假设。我们进行了专门设计的实验,以捕捉个体从其直接社会关系以及与其社会距离较近的关系中受到的影响,这是其在社交网络中距离的函数。对超过590名参与者进行的21次实验的结果表明,创新的采用率不仅受到我们最亲近的人的显著影响,还受到采用者所受的第二级和第三级影响的显著影响。使用一个考虑网络中直接和间接互动的数学模型,我们拟合了实验结果,并确定了影响随社会距离衰减的方式。结果表明,相对于最亲近的邻居,采用者来自其第二圈和第三圈影响的同伴压力强度分别约为三分之二和三分之一。我们的结果有力地表明,创新的采用是一个复杂的过程,在这个过程中,个体不仅会感受到来自其直接关系的巨大压力,还会感受到来自与其社会距离较近的人的巨大压力。