Networks and identity drive the spatial diffusion of linguistic innovation in urban and rural areas

被引:0
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作者
Aparna Ananthasubramaniam [1 ]
David Jurgens [1 ]
Daniel M. Romero [2 ]
机构
[1] University of Michigan,School of Information
[2] University of Michigan,Computer Science and Engineering Division, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Department
[3] University of Michigan,Center for the Study of Complex Systems
来源
npj Complexity | / 1卷 / 1期
关键词
D O I
10.1038/s44260-024-00009-9
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Cultural innovation (e.g., music, beliefs, language) tends to be adopted regionally. The geographic area where innovation is adopted is often attributed to one of two factors: (i) speakers adopting new behaviors that signal their demographic identities (i.e., an identity effect), or (ii) these behaviors spreading through homophilous networks (i.e., a network effect). In this study, we show that network and identity play complementary roles in determining where new language is adopted; thus, modeling the diffusion of lexical innovation requires incorporating both network and identity. We develop an agent-based model of cultural adoption, and validate geographic properties in our simulations against a dataset of innovative words that we identify from a 10% sample of Twitter (e.g., fleeky, birbs, ubering). Using our model, we are able to directly test the roles of network and identity by comparing a model that combines network and identity against simulated network-only and identity-only counterfactuals. We show that both effects influence different mechanisms of diffusion. Specifically, network principally drives spread among urban counties via weak-tie diffusion, while identity plays a disproportionate role in transmission among rural counties via strong-tie diffusion. Diffusion between urban and rural areas, a key component in innovation spreading nationally, requires both network and identity. Our work suggests that models must integrate both factors in order to understand and reproduce the adoption of innovation.
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