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Affective Polarization on Small-World and Scale-Free Networks
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Affective Polarization on Small-World and Scale-Free Networks

Alisson Serracín Morales and Buddhika Nettasinghe
ArXiv.org
Cornell University
03/29/2026
DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2603.27845
url
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.2603.27845View
Preprint (Author's original)This preprint has not been evaluated by subject experts through peer review. Preprints may undergo extensive changes and/or become peer-reviewed journal articles. Open Access

Abstract

Affective polarization, the emotional divide characterized by in-group love (trust towards fellow partisans) and out-group hate (mistrust towards those with opposite political views), has become prevalent in the current society. Despite its prevalence, the role of social network structure in the dynamics of affective polarization is yet to be well-understood. We provide a mean-field approximation of opinion dynamics under affective polarization on Watts-Strogatz and power-law (scale-free) networks. Our results show that consensus is fragile in social networks with power-law degree distributions, and the smaller average path length of the network (resembling a small-world network) makes achieving the consensus further difficult. Simulations and numerical experiments on real-world networks indicate that the mean-field model is aligned with the actual dynamics. Our findings shed light on how real-world network properties shape the dynamics of affective polarization and why consensus remains elusive in the real-world.
Computer Science - Social and Information Networks Physics - Physics and Society

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