TY - JOUR
T1 - Adoption as a Social Marker: Innovation Diffusion with Outgroup Aversion
T2 - Innovation diffusion with outgroup aversion
AU - Smaldino, Paul E.
AU - Janssen, Marco A.
AU - Hillis, Vicken
AU - Bednar, Jenna
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Taylor & Francis.
PY - 2017/1/1
Y1 - 2017/1/1
N2 - Social identities are among the key factors driving behavior in complex societies. Signals of social identity are known to influence individual behaviors in the adoption of innovations. Yet the population-level consequences of identity signaling on the diffusion of innovations are largely unknown. Here we use both analytical and agent-based modeling to consider the spread of a beneficial innovation in a structured population in which there exist two groups who are averse to being mistaken for each other. We investigate the dynamics of adoption and consider the role of structural factors such as demographic skew and communication scale on populationlevel outcomes. We find that outgroup aversion can lead to adoption being delayed or suppressed in one group, and that population-wide underadoption is common. Comparing the two models, we find that differential adoption can arise due to structural constraints on information flow even in the absence of intrinsic between-group differences in adoption rates. Further, we find that patterns of polarization in adoption at both local and global scales depend on the details of demographic organization and the scale of communication. This research has particular relevance to widely beneficial but identity-relevant products and behaviors, such as green technologies, where overall levels of adoption determine the positive benefits that accrue to society at large.
AB - Social identities are among the key factors driving behavior in complex societies. Signals of social identity are known to influence individual behaviors in the adoption of innovations. Yet the population-level consequences of identity signaling on the diffusion of innovations are largely unknown. Here we use both analytical and agent-based modeling to consider the spread of a beneficial innovation in a structured population in which there exist two groups who are averse to being mistaken for each other. We investigate the dynamics of adoption and consider the role of structural factors such as demographic skew and communication scale on populationlevel outcomes. We find that outgroup aversion can lead to adoption being delayed or suppressed in one group, and that population-wide underadoption is common. Comparing the two models, we find that differential adoption can arise due to structural constraints on information flow even in the absence of intrinsic between-group differences in adoption rates. Further, we find that patterns of polarization in adoption at both local and global scales depend on the details of demographic organization and the scale of communication. This research has particular relevance to widely beneficial but identity-relevant products and behaviors, such as green technologies, where overall levels of adoption determine the positive benefits that accrue to society at large.
KW - agent-based model
KW - identity signaling
KW - innovation diffusion
KW - networks
KW - polarization
KW - social identity
UR - https://scholarworks.boisestate.edu/hes_facpubs/7
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85004125612
U2 - 10.1080/0022250X.2016.1250083
DO - 10.1080/0022250X.2016.1250083
M3 - Article
VL - 41
SP - 26
EP - 45
JO - The Journal of Mathematical Sociology
JF - The Journal of Mathematical Sociology
IS - 1
ER -