This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.Whether getting vaccinated, buying stocks, or crossing streets, people rarely make decisions alone. Rather, multiple people decide sequentially, setting the stage for information cascades whereby early-deciding individuals can influence others’ choices. To understand how information cascades through social systems, it is essential to capture the dynamics of the decision-making process. We introduce the social drift–diffusion model to capture these dynamics. We tested our model using a sequential choice task. The model was able to recover the dynamics of the social decision-making process, accurately capturing how individuals integrate personal...
Poor decisions and selfish behaviors give rise to seemingly intractable global problems, such as the...
Individuals follow different rules for action: they react swiftly, grasping the short-term advantage...
I report on joint work with A. Baltag, Z. Christoff and J.U. Hansen in [3], based on our investigati...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.W...
Firms often face choices about when to upgrade and what to upgrade to. We discuss this in the contex...
Often insufficient information creates a situation in which we are forced to decide under uncertaint...
People often make decisions in a social environment. The present work examines social influence on p...
People often make decisions in a social environment. The present work examines social influence on p...
We review the theory of information cascades and social learning. Our goal is to describe in a rela...
“Network”, referring to the concept information flow among agents, is ubiquitous today. The networks...
Behavioural cascades through social reinforcement are ubiquitous in human and animal groups. Nonethe...
It is usually assumed that information cascades are most likely to occur when an early but incorrect...
It is widely believed that one's peers influence product adoption behaviors. This relationship has b...
Modeling and analysis of human behaviors in social networks are essential in fields such as online b...
In games of social learning individuals tend to give too much weight to their own private informatio...
Poor decisions and selfish behaviors give rise to seemingly intractable global problems, such as the...
Individuals follow different rules for action: they react swiftly, grasping the short-term advantage...
I report on joint work with A. Baltag, Z. Christoff and J.U. Hansen in [3], based on our investigati...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.W...
Firms often face choices about when to upgrade and what to upgrade to. We discuss this in the contex...
Often insufficient information creates a situation in which we are forced to decide under uncertaint...
People often make decisions in a social environment. The present work examines social influence on p...
People often make decisions in a social environment. The present work examines social influence on p...
We review the theory of information cascades and social learning. Our goal is to describe in a rela...
“Network”, referring to the concept information flow among agents, is ubiquitous today. The networks...
Behavioural cascades through social reinforcement are ubiquitous in human and animal groups. Nonethe...
It is usually assumed that information cascades are most likely to occur when an early but incorrect...
It is widely believed that one's peers influence product adoption behaviors. This relationship has b...
Modeling and analysis of human behaviors in social networks are essential in fields such as online b...
In games of social learning individuals tend to give too much weight to their own private informatio...
Poor decisions and selfish behaviors give rise to seemingly intractable global problems, such as the...
Individuals follow different rules for action: they react swiftly, grasping the short-term advantage...
I report on joint work with A. Baltag, Z. Christoff and J.U. Hansen in [3], based on our investigati...