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James A. Kitts

Professor of Sociology, Founding Co-Director of the Computational Social Science Institute

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Social Influence and the Emergence of Norms Amid Ties of Amity and Enmity

This paper explores the coevolution of social networks and behavioral norms. Previous research has investigated the long-term behavior of feedback systems of attraction and influence, particularly the tendency toward homogenization in arbitrary cultural fields. This paper extends those models by allowing that norms diffuse not only by simple contagion but through intentional sanctioning behavior among peers. Further, the model allows for negative relations, where actors differentiate themselves from enemies while seeking to align themselves with friends. Sociometric maps reveal nontrivial system dynamics – structural bifurcation, discrimination between factions, and cycles of deviance and solidarity – emerging from a few elementary agent-level assumptions.

View online appendix here.

Kitts, James A.  “Social Influence and the Emergence of Norms Amid Ties of Amity and Enmity.” Simulation Modelling Practice and Theory, 14(3): 407-422, March 2006.

This entry was posted in Research Article and tagged Computational Social Science, Cooperation, Influence, Interaction, Network Modeling, Norms, Polarization, Sentiments, Social Exchange on 2006 by James Kitts.

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Research Topics

Adolescent Friendship (4)
Computational Social Science (14)
Cooperation (8)
Culture (4)
Network Measurement (8)
Network Modeling (13)
Organizations (10)
Polarization (3)
Relational Events (4)
Social Exchange (8)
Influence (10)
Interaction (19)
Social Movements (4)
Norms (7)
Sentiments (9)
Trust (2)
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