Segregation and polarization in urban areas
Author(s)
Morales, Alfredo J; Dong, Xiaowen; Bar-Yam, Yaneer; ‘Sandy’ Pentland, Alex
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© 2019 The Authors. Published by the Royal Society Social behaviours emerge from the exchange of information among individuals—constrained by and reciprocally influencing the structure of information flows. The Internet radically transformed communication by democratizing broadcast capabilities and enabling easy and borderless formation of new acquaintances. However, actual information flows are heterogeneous and confined to self-organized echo-chambers. Of central importance to the future of society is understanding how existing physical segregation affects online social fragmentation. Here, we show that the virtual space is a reflection of the geographical space where physical interactions and proximity-based social learning are the main transmitters of ideas. We show that online interactions are segregated by income just as physical interactions are, and that physical separation reflects polarized behaviours beyond culture or politics. Our analysis is consistent with theoretical concepts suggesting polarization is associated with social exposure that reinforces within-group homogenization and between-group differentiation, and they together promote social fragmentation in mirrored physical and virtual spaces.
Date issued
2019Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Media LaboratoryJournal
Royal Society Open Science
Publisher
The Royal Society