A theory of the evolution of social power: Natural trajectories of interpersonal influence systems along issue sequences

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Abstract

This article reports new advancements in the theory of influence system evolution in small deliberative groups, and a novel set of empirical findings on such evolution. The theory elaborates the specification of the single-issue opinion dynamics of such groups, which has been the focus of theory development in the field of opinion dynamics, to include group dynamics that occur along a sequence of issues. The theory predicts an evolution of influence centralities along issue sequences based on elementary reflected appraisal mechanisms that modify influence network structure and flows of influence in the group. The new empirical findings, which are also reported in this article, present a remarkable suite of issue-sequence effects on influence network structure consistent with theoretical predictions.

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Friedkin, N. E., Jia, P., & Bullo, F. (2016). A theory of the evolution of social power: Natural trajectories of interpersonal influence systems along issue sequences. Sociological Science, 3, 444–472. https://doi.org/10.15195/v3.a20

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