Int'l J. of Communications, Network and System Sciences
Vol.7 No.6(2014), Article ID:46888,15 pages DOI:10.4236/ijcns.2014.76020

Multi-Cultural Dynamics on Social Networks under External Random Perturbations

J. Chandra1, G. S. Ladde2

1Department of Statistics, The George Washington University, Washington DC, USA

2Department of Mathematics and Statistics, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, USA

Email: jagdish.chandra@comcast.net, gladde@usf.edu

Copyright © 2014 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution International License (CC BY).

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Received 22 March 2014; revised 22 April 2014; accepted 16 May 2014

ABSTRACT

This work deals with the development of multi-cultural network-centric dynamic models under the influence of personal intraand inter-members, as well as community. Each individual member of a society is influenced by her/his interactions with fellow members of the family, neighborhood, region and the universe. The behavior of such complex and highly interacting social networks is characterized by stochastic interconnected dynamical systems. The primary goal is on laying down an investigation of both qualitative and quantitative properties of this network dynamical system. In particular, we would like to determine the regions of conflicts and coexietence as well as to establish the cohesion and stability of emerging states. This is achieved by employing the method of system of differential inequalities and comparison theorems in the context of the energy function. The developed energy function method provides estimates for regions of conflict and cooperation. Moreover, the method also provides sufficient conditions for the community cohesion and stability in a systematic way.

Keywords:Affinity Matrix, Cultural State, Gaussian Process, Mono-Cultural Network, Multi-Cultural Network, Moving Isotropic Center, Energy Function Method, Stochastic Process Moving Center

1. Introduction

Connectivity is the hallmark of the emerging world order. Competition and collaboration are central to stable order among conflicting interests of various groups, entities and nations. In his work [1] , Axelrod presents an excellent account of the complexity of cooperation. Motivated by this work, we systematically explore the behavior of a social network under cultural dynamic interactive forces in this paper. In our model, each individual member of a society is influenced by his/her interactions with fellow members of the family, neighborhood, region and the universe. There could also be a self-influence of reinforcement, or revision, and/or adaptation. The behavior of such complex and highly interacting social networks can be modeled by stochastic interconnected dynamical systems. Such a dynamic may be influenced both by deterministic and stochastic cultural forces. In this paper, we derive dynamic equations that incorporate intra-cultural and inter-cultural affinities subject to either the internal and/or the external random perturbations.

For the ease of exposition, we describe primarily the dynamics for single culture with multiple attributes, features/traits. However, our intrinsic framework is readily adaptable to multiple cultures, albeit with considerable algebraic complexity. Our primary focus here is on laying down an investigation of both qualitative and quantitative properties of these dynamical systems. For instance, our interests in pre-specified bounds, invariant sets, and stability properties are motivated by the evolution of coherent neighborhoods [2] , regions of conflicts, and the stability of emergent states. In the context of network sciences, in this work, we consider the dual dynamics of changing nodes (communities, entities, etc.) and also varying/evolving edges/connections (interactions, modalities, relations, etc.).

The organization of this paper is as follows: In Section 2, the basic deterministic and stochastic models of mono-cultural state structural and mono-cultural network dynamics are developed. We outline the problem formulation in Section 3. The sufficient conditions for the cohesion of mono-cultural community are presented in Section 4. In Section 5, we describe a nonlinear mono-cultural stochastic dynamic system and provide the sufficient conditions for the qualitative and quantitative properties stochastic network mono-cultural dynamic systems. Conclusions regarding the role and scope of our work are made in Section 6.

2. Basic Mono-Cultural Network Dynamics Models

We assume that the single-cultural system is under the influence of both personal intra and inter-member cultural forces. The cultural forces are induced by the magnitudes of current size of individual cultural state and the relative magnitudes of cultural states of the members in the home, neighborhood, and community. The influence of these cultural forces are measured by the degree (intensity/magnitude of desire to assimilate or changes) of self-cultural and inter-member cultural affinities.

Specifically, we consider m mono-cultural members living in a given community. The monoculture may have n features, where each feature describes a different aspect of the culture. Thus, we have n-dimensional cultural space. The cultural state of an individual member in the community at a time t is denoted by an n-dimensional vector. We assume that there is a synchronous dynamic with no time delays, that is, each individual member knows the instantaneous relative cultural affinity of all other individual members. For each pair of community members, the relative affinity of the i-th member relative to the j-th member is defined by

, (2.1)

where

is an diagonal matrix; is ‒1, 0, or 1 depending on whether

and

In the following, we develop a mono-cultural network dynamic model. The development of the model consists of two parts, namely, mono-cultural network model of state dynamics and structural (connectivity) dynamics. These models are described below.

2.1. Deterministic Mono-Cultural State Dynamic Model

The development of the mono-cultural state model is outlined as follows. For, let and be the changes in the k-th component of the cultural state of the i-th member due to his/her own change, the change due to the direct influence of j-th member and the change due to the social influence of the community on its members over an interval of time for, respectively. The effects of the cultural forces on the change of k-th component of the cultural state of the i-th member relative to k-th components of both the personal and the j-th member per capita changes of the respective cultural affinities generated by the intrainter and community effects over the time interval of length, , are

(2.2)

(2.3)

and

(2.4)

respectively, where for all

and all. The matrix represents the strength or affinity efficiency, and it is referred to as an affinity matrix of k-th feature of the culture. Hence, the net effects due to the self-influence, the community-influence and the influence of the j-th member on the change of k-th component of the cultural state of i relative to the corresponding components of the i-th and the j-th member respective changes over the interval of time of length, , is

. (2.5)

From (2.5), the change of the cultural state of the i-th member relative to the cultural state of the j-th member over the time interval for is

(2.6)

where and c are matrices defined by:

(2.7)

Thus for each pair, the total change of the cultural state of the i-th member relative to the cultural states of the members in the community over the interval of time for is

(2.8)

For very small, (2.8) reduces to the following deterministic mathematical model of continuous time mono-cultural cultural state dynamic of social network:

(2.9)

which can be written as:

(2.10)

where f represents the relative affinity potential between any pair of the members of the dynamic cultural network defined on into itself, and it is defined by:

(2.11)

2.2. Deterministic Mono-Cultural Structural Dynamic Model

Using the developed mono-cultural state dynamic model, we construct a mono-cultural structural dynamic model as below. For this purpose, for given an i-th member in the community, we form pair with a j-th member as and associate an n-dimensional cultural affinity link vector at a time t. Now, by following the above argument, using (2.9) and algebraic simplifications, we have

(2.12)

(2.13)

(2.14)

(2.15)

From the above description, we note that we have at least four equivalent mono-cultural structural dynamic models for the mono-cultural social network process. These models are presented below. Of course, these equivalent structural models provide a source of drawing different inferences.

2.3. Deterministic Mono-Cultural Network Dynamic Model

From (2.9), (2.12), (2.13), (2.14) and (2.15), a mono-cultural prototype network dynamic model is described by either one of the following at least four equivalent interconnected representations:

(2.16)

(2.17)

(2.18)

(2.19)

2.4. Deterministic Transformed Mono-Cultural Network Dynamic Systems

In order to investigate the qualitative and quantitative properties of mono-cultural interconnected network dynamic systems, we transform the mono-cultural network dynamic systems developed in Subsection 2.3. For this purpose, we assume the following:

In appearance, this assumption seems to be restrictive, however it does allow to have different strengths of self-affinity as well as affinity efficiency yielding the uniform rate per unit size of cultural size of components of the cultural state vector.

Now, we define the following linear invertible transformation to reduce (2.16), (2.17), (2.18) and (2.19) into suitable forms. Let us define a linear transformation:

(2.20)

where is an diagonal matrix defined by

This transformation induces an affinity-link transformation as follows:

(2.21)

Applying these transformations to systems of dynamic Equations (2.16), (2.17), (2.18) and (2.19), we obtain

(2.22)

(2.23)

(2.24)

(2.25)

2.5. Center of Deterministic Mono-Cultural Network Dynamic Systems

In this subsection, we examine the weighted/scaled mono-cultural network dynamic system. This is achieved by finding the weighted or scaled center of transformed mono-cultural network dynamic systems. A weighted/ scaled center is of any one of the equivalent transformed systems in Subsection 2.4. Thus, under the following assumption on the coupling or interactions between any pair of members of the community:

we define a center. We note that

(2.26)

From this observation, it is easy to verify that z is stationary center of the transformed interconnected monocultural network dynamic systems. To examine a center of the original interconnected mono-cultural network dynamic system, we apply the transformation defined in (2.20) to define a candidate for a center as:

(2.27)

where is as defined above. From hypotheses and, (2.9), (2.27), and the fact that z is the stationary solution of transformed system, we have

Thus the center of the original interconnected network dynamic system satisfies the following initial value problem:

(2.28)

where is stationary center of the transformed interconnected mono-cultural network dynamic systems. In fact, the center of the original interconnected network dynamic systems is time-varying stationary center. It signifies the time adjustment of the mono-cultural network dynamic center with the changes in the intra-intermember affinities of the community.

2.6. Stochastic Mono-Cultural Network Dynamic Model

We note that (A1) the size of individuals in a community is integral values, and (A2) the effects of affinity and/or in-affinity forces in community can cause a discrete time variation in parameters. In short, if the number of members in the system is large, the affinity/inter-affinity parametric diagonal matrices and c in (2.10) are subject torandom perturbations. Moreover, from (A1) and (A2), we assume that the random perturbations are described by stationary Gaussian process with independent increments. Hence:

(2.29)

for where is an identity matrix;’s are Gaussian processes with independent increments that satisfy the following assumptions:

are normalized Wiener processes and

(2.30)

for Therefore, by imitating the development of deterministic mono-cultural state (2.9) and any one of the structural models (2.12), (2.13), (2.14) and (2.15), one can arrive at the following equivalent monocultural prototype stochastic network dynamic models corresponding to equivalent deterministic models (2.16), (2.17),(2.18) and (2.19) [3] :

(2.31)

(2.32)

(2.33)

(2.34)

Moreover, in addition to assumption, we assume that the diffusion rate coefficients induced by a mono-cultural member self-affinity process satisfies the following assumption:

Moreover, we modify the linear transformation defined in (2.20) as:

(2.35)

where This transformation induces an affinity-link transformation as follows:

(2.36)

Under these assumptions and using transformation, (2.35) and (2.36), mono-cultural inter connected network stochastic dynamic systems (2.31), (2.32), (2.33) and (2.34) reduce to:

(2.37)

(2.38)

(2.39)

and

(2.40)

Under assumption (Hs0), we have an assumption parallel to (Hd2) as:

It is clear that the center of the transformed interconnected mono-cultural stochastic network dynamic systems is stationary. Thus, the center of the original interconnected stochastic network dynamic systems is stochastic process-varying stationary center.

Example 2.1 (Multi-agent-based mono-cultural Stochastic Network Dynamic System)

Multi-agent model [2] is extended to a cultural dynamic process. From Subsection 2.6 and using hypotheses (Hd1), (Hd2), (Hs0), (Hs1), (Hs2) and notations, a multi-agent-based mono-cultural Itô-Doob type stochastic network dynamic systems in the context of (2.32) is described by:

(2.41)

where and are real-valued functions; and are odd functions, and are defined by:

(2.42)

From assumptions (Hd1), (Hd2), (Hs0), (Hs1), (Hs2) and transformations (2.35) and (2.36), (2.41) reduces to:

(2.43)

3. Problem Formulation

The stochastic network dynamic model and Example 2.1 motivate us to study the nonlinear mono-cultural stochastic network dynamical system. Let us consider a mono-cultural dynamic system consisting of m members in a community with n features of a single-cultural community described by the following large-scale system of stochastic differential equations:

(3.1)

where; the drift and diffusion pairs of functions and are considered to be as potential functions that govern the individual member self-affinity, mono-cultural community affinity and intermember affinities in the absence and the presence of random external perturbations. The and are assumed to be odd functions. Moreover, they possess both long-range attractions and the short-range repulsion properties. We make the following assumptions on (3.1) (H):

1) is an n-dimensional random vector defined on a complete probability space

2) is an increasing family of sub-s-algebra of F;

3) are as defined in (2.29);

4) are -measurable for all;

5) and are mutually independent foe each and;

6) and;

7) and functions and are odd; for each and each

k-th components of and are functions of the k-th component of (nonlinear coordinate functions);

8) for each and are non-negative diagonal constant matrices defined in (2.30) and satisfy assumptions and;

9) and are smooth enough functions to insure the existence of a solution process of (3.1).

From assumption (H) 7), 8), and 9), and transformations (2.35) and (2.36), (3.1) reduces to:

(3.2)

where is a linear nonsingular transformation

defined in (2.35) and (2.36); moreover, it is a fundamental solution process [3] of:, where and. We further note that the rate coefficients preserve all conditions outlined in assumption (H).

A weighted/scaled center can be defined under various assumptions on the coupling/interaction coefficients and in (3.1). For example:

Moving Isotropic and Reciprocal Cases

In these cases, we define a center as, and we observe that the center is a time varying random process. This is because of the fact that

that is,

. (3.3)

In order to investigate the qualitative properties of the moving isotropic and reciprocal center x  of monocultural network dynamic system (3.1), we need to rewrite (3.1) to reduce the moving center to the zero (trivial center). For this purpose, we set and note Using this, (3.1) reduces to:

(3.4)

Historically, the Lyapunov Second Method/Energy Method has played a significant role in analyzing qualitative and quantitative properties of nominal state of dynamic systems in biological, chemical, engineering, physical and social sciences [2] -[4] . We extend these techniques to investigate properties of nonlinear mono-cultural network dynamic systems under environmental and random structural perturbations. In particular, we investigate properties such as cohesion, convergence, and stability of solution process of system (3.1). The collective behavior of such systems is explored in relation to its weighted/scaled center(s) [2] [5] [6] . Insights provided by these qualitative and quantitative estimates of the interaction patterns of collective behavior of nonlinear mono-cultural stochastic network dynamics under various formulations of social potentials (attraction/repulsion) can be very useful in practice.

It is easy to see through a special example below that the type of role of the random external perturbations play in collective behavior of mono-cultural community members in relation to the centers. Specifically, we note that if the individual member community is culturally further away from all other members, the random perturbations can cause it to move the member towards the weighted center. If it is close to all other members, then random fluctuations cause to move the member away from the center.

4. Cohesion of Mono-Cultural Community

To illustrate the utility of a Lyapunov-like energy method for establishing cohesion property of mono-cultural community under random perturbations, in this section, we consider a special case of system (3.1) in the context of (2.42) for maintaining the essential character of the dynamics. We consider Example 2.1with

and the rate coefficients in (3.1) are:

(4.1)

By setting and noting

and (3.2) reduces to:

(4.2)

In order to investigate the qualitative properties of the center of mono-cultural network dynamic systems under random environmental perturbations, we consider a candidate for a Lyapunov/Energy function as:

(4.3)

for the i-th member of the mono-cultural community evolving under random environmental perturbations, where. By applying the Itô–Doob differential formula [3] [4] [7] along the stochastic vector field (4.2), we have

, (4.4)

where is the smallest eigen value of the matrix:

(4.5)

Under the condition on matrix P in (4.5), an estimate on L in (4.4) and the application of comparison theorem [3] [4] , we conclude that the trivial solution of (4.2) is asymptotically stable in the mean-square. Thus, the random process varying center of (2.41) is asymptotically stable in the mean-square.

Remark 4.1

In the absence of the random fluctuations, the condition in (4.5) also assures that the mono-cultural network dynamic system (2.34) is asymptotically stable.

5. Nonlinear Mono-Cultural Network Stochastic Dynamic Systems

We now turn to the more general nonlinear mono-cultural network dynamic system described by (3.1). Furthermore, we assume that the potential functions are either isotropic-reciprocal or anisotropic. Under assumption (H), setting and the assumption of x being the moving isotropic, reciprocity, (4.1) is reduced to (4.4).

In fact, by recalling

and the transformed system (3.2) in the context of (3.4) is as follows:

(5.1)

for

Let be a space of k-dimensional continuous vector functions and defined on into that possesses continuous partial derivatives and on for

. For each fixed i, and any a linear operator L defined on into as follows [3] [4] :

(5.2)

where the function is the sum of functions and; and are defined as:

(5.3)

and

(5.4)

where

(5.5)

Let CK and VK denote the classes of functions that belong to where CK and VK are increasing concave and convex functions on, respectively; moreover, for CK and, respectively. In the following, we are ready to present very general sufficient conditions concerning the qualitative properties of mono-cultural network dynamic system under external random perturbations (5.1).

Theorem 5.1. Assume that the mono-cultural dynamic system (5.1), its energy like function V and corresponding linear differential operator L in (5.2) satisfy the following system inequalities for each fixed i, j and:

(a)                                    (5.6)

where for each ;

(b)                                      (5.7)

(c) is maximal solution of the following system block comparison system of differential equations [8] :

(5.8)

Then qualitative properties of the block trivial solution of a block comparison dynamic system described by (5.8) imply that the qualitative properties of mono-cultural center of the transformed dynamic system in the quadratic mean.

Proof. Using the hypotheses of theorem and the application of block comparison theorems [8] , we obtain the following estimate:

(5.9)

provided that

(5.10)

Finally, under the conditions of the theorem and following the standard argument [2] [4] [9] , the proof of the theorem follows from the estimate (5.9).

Example 5.1. For positive numbers, functions and are admissible in Theorem 5.1.

6. Conclusion

In this paper, we have investigated a broad class of social network dynamic behaviors focusing on a mono-cultural societal/community member interacting network dynamic systems. Our principal interests are in the qualitative and quantitative properties such as robustness, convergence and stability. Utilizing energy-like functions and the theory of differential inequalities, we derive explicit conditions that are sufficient, algebraically simple and computable. Our method does not require the explicit knowledge of solution processes. The qualitative results such as convergence and stability are readily applicable to a broad class of social networks. We intend to pursue these goals in a future paper.

Acknowledgements

This research was supported by the Mathematical Sciences Division, US Army Research Office; the first author by Grant No. W911NF-05-10209, and the second author by Grant No. W911NF-12-1-0090.

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