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We consider the persistent voter model (PVM), a variant of the voter model (VM) that includes transient, dynamically induced zealots. Due to peer reinforcement, the internal confidence ₈ of a normal voter increases in steps of size. Once it surpasses a given threshold, it becomes a zealot. Its opinion remains frozen until enough interactions with the opposing opinion occur, resetting its confidence. No longer a zealot, the regular voter may change opinion once again. This mechanism of opinion inertia, though simplified, is responsible for an effective surface tension, and the PVM exhibits a crossover from a fluctuation-driven dynamics, as in the VM, to a curvature-driven one, akin to the Ising model at low temperature. The average time to attain consensus is nonmonotonic with respect to and reaches a minimum at ₌₈₍. In this paper we elucidate the mechanisms that accelerate the system towards consensus close to ₌₈₍. Near the crossover at ₌₈₍, the intermediate region around the domains where the regular voters accumulate (the active region, AR) is large. The surface tension, albeit small, is sufficient to maintain the shape and reduce the domain fragmentation. The large size of the AR in the region of ₌₈₍ has two important effects that accelerate the dynamics. First, it dislodges the zealots within the bulk of the domains. Secondly, it maximally suppresses the formation of slowly evolving stripes typical in Ising-like models. This suggests the importance of understanding the role of the AR, where opinion changes are facilitated, and the interplay between regular voters and zealots in disrupting polarized states.
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Luís Carlos F. Latoski
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
W. G. Dantas
Universidade Federal Fluminense
Jeferson J. Arenzon
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
Physical review. E
Instituto de Física La Plata
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Latoski et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e6a293b6db64358762654b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1103/physreve.109.054115