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MADmax: Multi-agent Trust Dynamics and Influence Maximization

Springer Proceedings in Complexity

Sorensen, Asael H.; Sweitzer, Matthew D.; Naugle, Asmeret; Doyle, Casey L.; Krofcheck, Daniel J.

Influence in the post social media, world-is-flat online social landscape, has gone through an apocalypse level transformation. Trust, the critical component for social cohesion, now develops in a vastly different context from most of human history. We present MADmax, a multi-agent opinion dynamics simulation that utilizes reinforcement learning to evaluate influence strategies in trust-driven social networks. The simulation incorporates a real-world calibrated system dynamics trust model to mediate influence in an agent-based model (ABM) that simulates the evolution of opinions. We employ multi-agent reinforcement learning (MARL) to discover and evaluate influence strategies. Agents collaborate on influence teams, and results offer insight into intra-team competition and inter-team coordination. Additionally, we identify possible indicators of influence campaigns, such as increases in extremism.

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Spatiotemporal Analyses of News Media Coverage on “Nuclear Waste”: A Natural Language Processing Approach

Nuclear Technology

Sweitzer, Matthew D.; Gunda, Thushara

The siting of nuclear waste is a process that requires consideration of concerns of the public. This report demonstrates the significant potential for natural language processing techniques to gain insights into public narratives around “nuclear waste.” Specifically, the report highlights that the general discourse regarding “nuclear waste” within the news media has fluctuated in prevalence compared to “nuclear” topics broadly over recent years, with commonly mentioned entities reflecting a limited variety of geographies and stakeholders. General sentiments within the “nuclear waste” articles appear to use neutral language, suggesting that a scientific or “facts-only” framing of “waste”-related issues dominates coverage; however, the exact nuances should be further evaluated. The implications of a number of these insights about how nuclear waste is framed in traditional media (e.g., regarding emerging technologies, historical events, and specific organizations) are discussed. This report lays the groundwork for larger, more systematic research using, for example, transformer-based techniques and covariance analysis to better understand relationships among “nuclear waste” and other nuclear topics, sentiments of specific entities, and patterns across space and time (including in a particular region). By identifying priorities and knowledge needs, these data-driven methods can complement and inform engagement strategies that promote dialogue and mutual learning regarding nuclear waste.

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Water narratives in local newspapers within the United States

Frontiers in Environmental Science

Sweitzer, Matthew D.; Gunda, Thushara; Gilligan, Jonathan M.

Sustainable use of water resources continues to be a challenge across the globe. This is in part due to the complex set of physical and social behaviors that interact to influence water management from local to global scales. Analyses of water resources have been conducted using a variety of techniques, including qualitative evaluations of media narratives. This study aims to augment these methods by leveraging computational and quantitative techniques from the social sciences focused on text analyses. Specifically, we use natural language processing methods to investigate a large corpus (approx. 1.8M) of newspaper articles spanning approximately 35 years (1982–2017) for insights into human-nature interactions with water. Focusing on local and regional United States publications, our analysis demonstrates important dynamics in water-related dialogue about drinking water and pollution to other critical infrastructures, such as energy, across different parts of the country. Our assessment, which looks at water as a system, also highlights key actors and sentiments surrounding water. Extending these analytical methods could help us further improve our understanding of the complex roles of water in current society that should be considered in emerging activities to mitigate and respond to resource conflicts and climate change.

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Results 1–25 of 33
Results 1–25 of 33
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