Further results on consensus formation in the Deffuant model
Abstract
The so-called Deffuant model describes a pattern for social interaction, in which two neighboring individuals randomly meet and share their opinions on a certain topic, if their discrepancy is not beyond a given threshold θ. The major focus of the analyses, both theoretical and based on simulations, lies on whether these single interactions lead to a global consensus in the long run or not. First, we generalize a result of Lanchier for the Deffuant model on Z, determining the critical value for θ at which a phase transition of the long term behavior takes place, to other distributions of the initial opinions than i.i.d.\ uniform on [0,1]. Then we shed light on the situations where the underlying line graph Z is replaced by higher-dimensional lattices Zd,\ d≥2, or the infinite cluster of supercritical i.i.d.\ bond percolation on these lattices.
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