DeGroot learning refers to a rule-of-thumb type of social learning process. The idea was stated in its general form by the American statistician Morris H. DeGroot;[1] antecedents were articulated by John R. P. French[2] and Frank Harary.[3] The model has been used in physics, computer science and most widely in the theory of social networks.[4][5]

Setup and the learning process edit

Take a society of   agents where everybody has an opinion on a subject, represented by a vector of probabilities  . Agents obtain no new information based on which they can update their opinions but they communicate with other agents. Links between agents (who knows whom) and the weight they put on each other's opinions is represented by a trust matrix   where   is the weight that agent   puts on agent  's opinion. The trust matrix is thus in a one-to-one relationship with a weighted, directed graph where there is an edge between   and   if and only if  . The trust matrix is stochastic, its rows consists of nonnegative real numbers, with each row summing to 1.

Formally, the beliefs are updated in each period as

 

so the   th period opinions are related to the initial opinions by

 

Convergence of beliefs and consensus edit

An important question is whether beliefs converge to a limit and to each other in the long run. As the trust matrix is stochastic, standard results in Markov chain theory can be used to state conditions under which the limit

 

exists for any initial beliefs  . The following cases are treated in Golub and Jackson [6] (2010).

Strongly connected case edit

If the social network graph (represented by the trust matrix) is strongly connected, convergence of beliefs is equivalent to each of the following properties:

  • the graph represented by   is aperiodic
  • there is a unique left eigenvector   of   corresponding to eigenvalue 1 whose entries sum to 1 such that, for every  ,   for every   where   denotes the dot product.

The equivalence between the last two is a direct consequence from Perron–Frobenius theorem.

General case edit

It is not necessary to have a strongly connected social network to have convergent beliefs, however, the equality of limiting beliefs does not hold in general.

We say that a group of agents   is closed if for any  ,   only if   . Beliefs are convergent if and only if every set of nodes (representing individuals) that is strongly connected and closed is also aperiodic.

Consensus edit

A group   of individuals is said to reach a consensus if   for any  . This means that, as a result of the learning process, in the limit they have the same belief on the subject.

With a strongly connected and aperiodic network the whole group reaches a consensus. In general, any strongly connected and closed group   of individuals reaches a consensus for every initial vector of beliefs if and only if it is aperiodic. If, for example, there are two groups satisfying these assumptions, they reach a consensus inside the groups but there is not necessarily a consensus at the society level.

Social influence edit

Take a strongly connected and aperiodic social network. In this case, the common limiting belief is determined by the initial beliefs through

 

where   is the unique unit length left eigenvector of   corresponding to the eigenvalue 1. The vector   shows the weights that agents put on each other's initial beliefs in the consensus limit. Thus, the higher is  , the more influence individual   has on the consensus belief.

The eigenvector property   implies that

 

This means that the influence of   is a weighted average of those agents' influence   who pay attention to  , with weights of their level of trust. Hence influential agents are characterized by being trusted by other individuals with high influence.

Examples edit

These examples appear in Jackson [4] (2008).

Convergence of beliefs edit

 
A society with convergent beliefs

Consider a three-individual society with the following trust matrix:

 

Hence the first person weights the beliefs of the other two with equally, while the second listens only to the first, the third only to the second individual. For this social trust structure, the limit exists and equals

 

so the influence vector is   and the consensus belief is  . In words, independently of the initial beliefs, individuals reach a consensus where the initial belief of the first and the second person has twice as high influence than the third one's.

Non-convergent beliefs edit

 
A society with non-convergent beliefs

If we change the previous example such that the third person also listens exclusively to the first one, we have the following trust matrix:

 

In this case for any   we have

 

and

 

so   does not exist and beliefs do not converge in the limit. Intuitively, 1 is updating based on 2 and 3's beliefs while 2 and 3 update solely based on 1's belief so they interchange their beliefs in each period.

Asymptotic properties in large societies: wisdom edit

It is possible to examine the outcome of the DeGroot learning process in large societies, that is, in the   limit.

Let the subject on which people have opinions be a "true state"  . Assume that individuals have independent noisy signals   of   (now superscript refers to time, the argument to the size of the society). Assume that for all   the trust matrix   is such that the limiting beliefs   exists independently from the initial beliefs. Then the sequence of societies   is called wise if

 

where   denotes convergence in probability. This means that if the society grows without bound, over time they will have a common and accurate belief on the uncertain subject.

A necessary and sufficient condition for wisdom can be given with the help of influence vectors. A sequence of societies is wise if and only if

 

that is, the society is wise precisely when even the most influential individual's influence vanishes in the large society limit. For further characterization and examples see Golub and Jackson[6] (2010).

References edit

  1. ^ DeGroot, Morris H. 1974. “Reaching a Consensus.Journal of the American Statistical Association, 69(345): 118–21.
  2. ^ French, John R. P. 1956. “A Formal Theory of Social Power” Psychological Review, 63: 181–94.
  3. ^ Harary, Frank. 1959. “A Criterion for Unanimity in French's Theory of Social Power” in Dorwin Cartwright (ed.), Studies in Social Power, Ann Arbor, MI: Institute for Social Research.
  4. ^ a b Jackson, Matthew O. 2008. Social and Economic Networks. Princeton University Press.
  5. ^ Koley, Gaurav; Deshmukh, Jayati; Srinivasa, Srinath (2020). "Social Capital as Engagement and Belief Revision". In Aref, Samin; Bontcheva, Kalina; Braghieri, Marco; Dignum, Frank; Giannotti, Fosca; Grisolia, Francesco; Pedreschi, Dino (eds.). Social Informatics. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 12467. Cham: Springer International Publishing. pp. 137–151. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-60975-7_11. ISBN 978-3-030-60975-7. S2CID 222233101.
  6. ^ a b Golub, Benjamin & Matthew O. Jackson 2010. "Naïve Learning in Social Networks and the Wisdom of Crowds," American Economic Journal: Microeconomics, American Economic Association, vol. 2(1), pages 112-49, February.