Sigal Oren
 
  
Abstract:
A long-standing line  of work in economic theory has studied models by which a group of people in a  social network, each holding a numerical opinion, can arrive at a shared  opinion through repeated averaging with their neighbors in the network.  Motivated by the observation that consensus is rarely reached in real opinion  dynamics, we study a related sociological model in which individuals’ intrinsic  beliefs counterbalance the averaging process and yield a diversity of opinions.
    
By interpreting the repeated averaging as best-response dynamics in an  underlying game with natural payoffs, and the limit of the process as an  equilibrium, we are able to study the cost of disagreement in these models  relative to a social optimum. We provide a tight bound on the cost at  equilibrium relative to the optimum; our analysis draws a connection between  these agreement models and extremal problems for generalized eigenvalues. We  also consider a natural network design problem in this setting, where adding  links to the underlying network can reduce the cost of disagreement at  equilibrium.
This is joint work with David Bindel and Jon Kleinberg.