Information cascade

(Redirected from Informational Cascade)

An information cascade or informational cascade is a phenomenon described in behavioral economics and network theory in which a number of people make the same decision in a sequential fashion. It is similar to, but distinct from herd behavior.[1][2][3]

An information cascade is generally accepted as a two-step process. For a cascade to begin an individual must encounter a scenario with a decision, typically a binary one. Second, outside factors can influence this decision, such as the individual observing others' choices and the apparent outcomes.

The two-step process of an informational cascade can be broken down into five basic components:

  1. There is a decision to be made – for example; whether to adopt a new technology, wear a new style of clothing, eat in a new restaurant, or support a particular political position
  2. A limited action space exists (e.g. an adopt/reject decision)
  3. People make the decision sequentially, and each person can observe the choices made by those who acted earlier
  4. Each person has some information aside from their own that helps guide their decision
  5. A person can't directly observe the outside information that other people know, but he or she can make inferences about this information from what they do

Social perspectives of cascades, which suggest that agents may act irrationally (e.g., against what they think is optimal) when social pressures are great, exist as complements to the concept of information cascades.[4] More often the problem is that the concept of an information cascade is confused with ideas that do not match the two key conditions of the process, such as social proof, information diffusion,[5] and social influence. Indeed, the term information cascade has even been used to refer to such processes.[6]

Basic model

edit

This section provides some basic examples of information cascades, as originally described by Bikchandani et al. (1992).[7] The basic model has since been developed in a variety of directions to examine its robustness and better understand its implications.[8][9]

Qualitative example

edit

Information cascades occur when external information obtained from previous participants in an event overrides one's own private signal, irrespective of the correctness of the former over the latter. The experiment conducted by Anderson[10] is a useful example of this process. The experiment consisted of two urns labeled A and B. Urn A contains two balls labeled "a" and one labeled "b". Urn B contains one ball labeled "a" and two labeled "b". The urn from which a ball must be drawn during each run is determined randomly and with equal probabilities (from the throw of a dice). The contents of the chosen urn are emptied into a neutral container. The participants are then asked in random order to draw a marble from this container. This entire process may be termed a "run", and a number of such runs are performed.

Each time a participant picks up a marble, he is to decide which urn it belongs to. His decision is then announced for the benefit of the remaining participants in the room. Thus, the (n+1)th participant has information about the decisions made by all the n participants preceding him, and also his private signal which is the label on the ball that he draws during his turn. The experimenters observed that an information cascade was observed in 41 of 56 such runs. This means, in the runs where the cascade occurred, at least one participant gave precedence to earlier decisions over his own private signal. It is possible for such an occurrence to produce the wrong result. This phenomenon is known as "Reverse Cascade".

Quantitative description

edit

A person's signal telling them to accept is denoted as H (a high signal, where high signifies he should accept), and a signal telling them not to accept is L (a low signal). The model assumes that when the correct decision is to accept, individuals will be more likely to see an H, and conversely, when the correct decision is to reject, individuals are more likely to see an L signal. This is essentially a conditional probability – the probability of H when the correct action is to accept, or  . Similarly   is the probability that an agent gets an L signal when the correct action is reject. If these likelihoods are represented by q, then q > 0.5. This is summarized in the table below.[11]

Agent signal True probability state
Reject Accept
L q 1-q
H 1-q q

The first agent determines whether or not to accept solely based on his own signal. As the model assumes that all agents act rationally, the action (accept or reject) the agent feels is more likely is the action he will choose to take. This decision can be explained using Bayes' rule:

 

If the agent receives an H signal, then the likelihood of accepting is obtained by calculating  . The equation says that, by virtue of the fact that q > 0.5, the first agent, acting only on his private signal, will always increase his estimate of p with an H signal. Similarly, it can be shown that an agent will always decrease his expectation of p when he receives a low signal. Recalling that, if the value, V, of accepting is equal to the value of rejecting, then an agent will accept if he believes p > 0.5, and reject otherwise. Because this agent started out with the assumption that both accepting and rejecting are equally viable options (p = 0.5), the observation of an H signal will allow him to conclude that accepting is the rational choice.

The second agent then considers both the first agent's decision and his own signal, again in a rational fashion. In general, the nth agent considers the decisions of the previous n-1 agents, and his own signal. He makes a decision based on Bayesian reasoning to determine the most rational choice.

 

Where a is the number of accepts in the previous set plus the agent's own signal, and b is the number of rejects. Thus,  . The decision is based on how the value on the right hand side of the equation compares with p.[11]

Explicit model assumptions

edit

The original model makes several assumptions about human behavior and the world in which humans act,[7] some of which are relaxed in later versions[11] or in alternate definitions of similar problems, such as the diffusion of innovations.

  1. Boundedly Rational Agents: The original Independent Cascade model assumes humans are boundedly rational[12] – that is, they will always make rational decisions based on the information they can observe, but the information they observe may not be complete or correct. In other words, agents do not have complete knowledge of the world around them (which would allow them to make the correct decision in any and all situations). In this way, there is a point at which, even if a person has correct knowledge of the idea or action cascading, they can be convinced via social pressures to adopt some alternate, incorrect view of the world.
  2. Incomplete Knowledge of Others: The original information cascade model assumes that agents have incomplete knowledge of the agents which precede them in the specified order. As opposed to definitions where agents have some knowledge of the "private information" held by previous agents, the current agent makes a decision based only on the observable action (whether or not to imitate) of those preceding him. It is important to note that the original creators argue this is a reason why information cascades can be caused by small shocks.
  3. Behavior of all previous agents is known

Resulting conditions

edit
  1. Cascades will always occur – as discussed, in the simple mode, the likelihood of a cascade occurring increases towards 1 as the number of people making decisions increases towards infinity.
  2. Cascades can be incorrect – because agents make decisions with both bounded rationality and probabilistic knowledge of the initial truth (e.g. whether accepting or rejecting is the correct decision), the incorrect behavior may cascade through the system.
  3. Cascades can be based on little information – mathematically, a cascade of an infinite length can occur based only on the decision of two people. More generally, a small set of people who strongly promote an idea as being rational can rapidly influence a much larger subset of the general population
  4. Cascades are fragile – because agents receive no extra information after the difference between a and b increases beyond 2, and because such differences can occur at small numbers of agents, agents considering opinions from those agents who are making decisions based on actual information can be dissuaded from a choice rather easily.[7] This suggests that cascades are susceptible to the release of public information.[7] also discusses this result in the context of the underlying value p changing over time, in which case a cascade can rapidly change course.

Responding

edit

A literature exists that examines how individuals or firms might respond to the existence of informational cascades when they have products to sell but where buyers are unsure of the quality of those products. Curtis Taylor (1999)[13] shows that when selling a house the seller might wish to start with high prices, as failure to sell with low prices is indicative of low quality and might start a cascade on not buying, while failure to sell with high prices could be construed as meaning the house is just over-priced, and prices can then be reduced to get a sale. Daniel Sgroi (2002)[14] shows that firms might use "guinea pigs" who are given the opportunity to buy early to kick-start an informational cascade through their early and public purchasing decisions, and work by David Gill and Daniel Sgroi (2008)[15] show that early public tests might have a similar effect (and in particular that passing a "tough test" which is biased against the seller can instigate a cascade all by itself). Bose et al.[16] have examined how prices set by a monopolist might evolve in the presence of potential cascade behavior where the monopolist and consumers are unsure of a products quality.

Examples and fields of application

edit

Information cascades occur in situations where seeing many people make the same choice provides evidence that outweighs one's own judgment. That is, one thinks: "It's more likely that I'm wrong than that all those other people are wrong. Therefore, I will do as they do."

In what has been termed a reputational cascade, late responders sometimes go along with the decisions of early responders, not just because the late responders think the early responders are right, but also because they perceive their reputation will be damaged if they dissent from the early responders.[17]

Market cascades

edit

Information cascades have become one of the topics of behavioral economics, as they are often seen in financial markets where they can feed speculation and create cumulative and excessive price moves, either for the whole market (market bubble) or a specific asset, like a stock that becomes overly popular among investors.[citation needed]

Marketers also use the idea of cascades to attempt to get a buying cascade started for a new product. If they can induce an initial set of people to adopt the new product, then those who make purchasing decisions later on may also adopt the product even if it is no better than, or perhaps even worse than, competing products. This is most effective if these later consumers are able to observe the adoption decisions, but not how satisfied the early customers actually were with the choice. This is consistent with the idea that cascades arise naturally when people can see what others do but not what they know.[citation needed]

An example is Hollywood movies. If test screenings suggest a big-budget movie might be a flop, studios often decide to spend more on initial marketing rather than less, with the aim of making as much money as possible on the opening weekend, before word gets around that it's a turkey.[citation needed]

Information cascades are usually considered by economists:[citation needed]

  • as products of rational expectations at their start,
  • as irrational herd behavior if they persist for too long, which signals that collective emotions come also into play to feed the cascade.

Social networks and social media

edit

Dotey et al.[18] state that information flows in the form of cascades on the social network. According to the authors, analysis of virality of information cascades on a social network may lead to many useful applications like determining the most influential individuals within a network. This information can be used for maximizing market effectiveness or influencing public opinion. Various structural and temporal features of a network affect cascade virality. Additionally, these models are widely exploited in the problem of Rumor spread in social network to investigate it and reduce its influence in online social networks.

In contrast to work on information cascades in social networks, the social influence model of belief spread argues that people have some notion of the private beliefs of those in their network.[19] The social influence model, then, relaxes the assumption of information cascades that people are acting only on observable actions taken by others. In addition, the social influence model focuses on embedding people within a social network, as opposed to a queue. Finally, the social influence model relaxes the assumption of the information cascade model that people will either complete an action or not by allowing for a continuous scale of the "strength" of an agents belief that an action should be completed.

Information cascades can also restructure the social networks that they pass through. For example, while there is a constant low level of churn in social ties on Twitter—in any given month, about 9% of all social connections change—there is often a spike in follow and unfollow activity following an information cascade, such as the sharing of a viral tweet.[20] As the tweet-sharing cascade passes through the network, users adjust their social ties, particularly those connected to the original author of the viral tweet: the author of a viral tweet will see both a sudden loss in previous followers and a sudden increase in new followers.

As a part of this cascade-driven reorganization process, information cascades can also create assortative social networks, where people tend to be connected to others who are similar in some characteristic. Tweet cascades increase in the similarity between connected users, as users lose ties to more dissimilar users and add new ties to similar users.[20] Information cascades created by news coverage in the media may also foster political polarization by sorting social networks along political lines: Twitter users who follow and share more polarized news coverage tend to lose social ties to users of the opposite ideology.[21]

Historical examples

edit
  • Small protests began in Leipzig, Germany in 1989 with just a handful of activists challenging the German Democratic Republic.[22] For almost a year, protesters met every Monday growing by a few people each time.[22] By the time the government attempted to address it in September 1989, it was too big to quash.[22] In October, the number of protesters reached 100,000 and by the first Monday in November, over 400,000 people marched the streets of Leipzig. Two days later the Berlin Wall was dismantled.[22]
  • The adoption rate of drought-resistant hybrid seed corn during the Great Depression and Dust Bowl was slow despite its significant improvement over the previously available seed corn. Researchers at Iowa State University were interested in understanding the public's hesitation to the adoption of this significantly improved technology. After conducting 259 interviews with farmers[23] it was observed that the slow rate of adoption was due to how the farmers valued the opinion of their friends and neighbors instead of the word of a salesman. See[24] for the original report.

Empirical studies

edit

In addition to the examples above, Information Cascades have been shown to exist in several empirical studies. Perhaps the best example, given above, is.[10] Participants stood in a line behind an urn which had balls of different colors. Sequentially, participants would pick a ball out of the urn, looks at it, and then places it back into the urn. The agent then voices their opinion of which color of balls (red or blue) there is a majority of in the urn for the rest of the participants to hear. Participants get a monetary reward if they guess correctly, forcing the concept of rationality.

Other examples include

  • De Vany and Walls[25] create a statistical model of information cascades where an action is required. They apply this model to the actions people take to go see a movie that has come out at the theatre. De Vany and Walls validate their model on this data, finding a similar Pareto distribution of revenue for different movies.
  • Walden and Browne also adopt the original Information Cascade model, here into an operational model more practical for real world studies, which allows for analysis based on observed variables. Walden and Browne test their model on data about adoption of new technologies by businesses, finding support for their hypothesis that information cascades play a role in this adoption[26]
edit

The negative effects of informational cascades sometimes become a legal concern and laws have been enacted to neutralize them. Ward Farnsworth, a law professor, analyzed the legal aspects of informational cascades and gave several examples in his book The Legal Analyst: in many military courts, the officers voting to decide a case vote in reverse rank order (the officer of the lowest rank votes first), and he suggested it may be done so the lower-ranked officers would not be tempted by the cascade to vote with the more senior officers, who are believed to have more accurate judgement; another example is that countries such as Israel and France have laws that prohibit polling days or weeks before elections to prevent the effect of informational cascade that may influence the election results.[27]

Globalization

edit

One informational cascade study compared thought processes between Greek and German organic farmers, suggesting discrepancies based upon cultural and socioeconomic differences.[28] Even further, cascades have been extrapolated to ideas such as financial volatility and monetary policy. In 2004 Helmut Wagner and Wolfram Berger suggested cascades as an analytical vehicle to examine changes to the financial market as it became more globalized. Wagner and Berger noticed structural changes to the framework of understanding financial markets due to globalization; giving rise to volatility in capital flow and spawning uncertainty which affected central banks.[29] Additionally, information cascades are useful in understanding the origins of terrorist tactics. When the attack by Black September occurred in 1972 it was hard not to see the similarities between their tactics and the Baader-Meinhof group (also known as the Red Army Faction [RAF]).[30] All of these examples portray how the process of cascades were put into use. Moreover, it is important to understand the framework of cascades to move forward in a more globalized society. Establishing a foundation to understanding the passage of information through transnational and multinational organizations, and even more, is critical to the arising modern society.[31] Summing up all of these points, cascades, as a general term, encompass a spectrum of different concepts. Information cascades have been the underlying thread in how information is transferred, overwritten, and understood through various cultures spanning from a multitude of different countries.[32]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Duan, Wenjing; Gu, Bin; Whinston, Andrew B. (March 2009). "Informational Cascades and Software Adoption on the Internet: An Empirical Investigation". MIS Quarterly. 33 (1). Rochester, NY: 23–48. doi:10.2307/20650277. hdl:2144/42029. JSTOR 20650277. S2CID 909115. SSRN 1103165.
  2. ^ "The Difference Between Information Cascades and Herd Behavior : Networks Course blog for INFO 2040/CS 2850/Econ 2040/SOC 2090". Retrieved 2019-04-15.
  3. ^ Çelen, Boğaçhan; Kariv, Shachar (May 2004). "Distinguishing Informational Cascades from Herd Behavior in the Laboratory". American Economic Review. 94 (3): 484–498. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.357.3265. doi:10.1257/0002828041464461.
  4. ^ Schiller, R.J. (1995). "Conversation, Information and Herd Behavior". Rhetoric and Economic Behavior. 85 (3): 181–185.
  5. ^ Gruhl, Daniel; Guha, R.; Liben-Nowell, David; Tomkins, Andrew (2004). "Information diffusion through blogspace". Proceedings of the 13th international conference on World Wide Web. pp. 491–501. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.131.4532. doi:10.1145/988672.988739. ISBN 978-1-58113-844-3. S2CID 526158.
  6. ^ Sadikov, Eldar; Medina, Montserrat; Leskovec, Jure; Garcia-Molina, Hector (2011). "Correcting for missing data in information cascades". Proceedings of the fourth ACM international conference on Web search and data mining. pp. 55–64. doi:10.1145/1935826.1935844. ISBN 978-1-4503-0493-1. S2CID 6978077.
  7. ^ a b c d Bikhchandani, Sushil; Hirshleifer, David; Welch, Ivo (October 1992). "A Theory of Fads, Fashion, Custom, and Cultural Change as Informational Cascades" (PDF). Journal of Political Economy. 100 (5): 992–1026. doi:10.1086/261849. S2CID 7784814.
  8. ^ Bikhchandani, Sushil; Hirshleifer, David; Welch, Ivo (August 1998). "Learning from the Behavior of Others: Conformity, Fads, and Informational Cascades". Journal of Economic Perspectives. 12 (3): 151–170. doi:10.1257/jep.12.3.151. hdl:2027.42/35413.
  9. ^ Smith, Lones; Sorensen, Peter (March 2000). "Pathological Outcomes of Observational Learning". Econometrica. 68 (2): 371–398. doi:10.1111/1468-0262.00113. hdl:1721.1/64049. S2CID 14414203.
  10. ^ a b Anderson, Lisa R.; Holt, Charles A. (1997). "Information Cascades in the Laboratory". The American Economic Review. 87 (5): 847–862. JSTOR 2951328.
  11. ^ a b c Easley, David (2010). Networks, Crowds and Markets: Reasoning about a Highly Connected World. Cambridge University Press. pp. 483–506.
  12. ^ Newell, A. (1972). Human problem solving. Englewood Cliffs, NY: Prentice Hall. ISBN 9780134454030.
  13. ^ Taylor, C. (1999). "Time-on-the-Market as a Sign of Quality". Review of Economic Studies. 66 (3): 555–578. doi:10.1111/1467-937x.00098.
  14. ^ Sgroi, D. (2002). "Optimizing Information in the Herd: Guinea Pigs, Profits, and Welfare" (PDF). Games and Economic Behavior. 39: 137–166. doi:10.1006/game.2001.0881.
  15. ^ Gill, D.; D. Sgroi (2008). "Sequential Decisions with Tests". Games and Economic Behavior. 63 (2): 663–678. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.322.7566. doi:10.1016/j.geb.2006.07.004. S2CID 5793119.
  16. ^ Bose, S.; G. Orosel; M. Ottaviani; L. Vesterlund (2006). "Dynamic Monopoly Pricing and Herding". RAND Journal of Economics. 37 (4): 910–928. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.493.1834. doi:10.1111/j.1756-2171.2006.tb00063.x. S2CID 2984643.
  17. ^ Lemieux, Pierre (22 December 2003). "Following the herd: why do some ideas suddenly become popular, and then die out just as quickly?". Regulation. 26 (4): 16–22. SSRN 505764. Gale A113304115.
  18. ^ Dotey, A., Rom, H. and Vaca C. (2011). "Information Diffusion in Social Media" (PDF). Stanford University.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  19. ^ Friedkin, Noah E.; Johnsen, Eugene C. (2009). Social Influence Network Theory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/cbo9780511976735. ISBN 978-0-511-97673-5.
  20. ^ a b Myers, Seth A.; Leskovec, Jure (2014). "The bursty dynamics of the Twitter information network". Proceedings of the 23rd international conference on World wide web. pp. 913–924. arXiv:1403.2732. doi:10.1145/2566486.2568043. ISBN 978-1-4503-2744-2. S2CID 6353961.
  21. ^ Tokita, Christopher K.; Guess, Andrew M.; Tarnita, Corina E. (14 December 2021). "Polarized information ecosystems can reorganize social networks via information cascades". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 118 (50): e2102147118. Bibcode:2021PNAS..11802147T. doi:10.1073/pnas.2102147118. PMC 8685718. PMID 34876511.
  22. ^ a b c d Shirky, Clay (2008). Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations. New York: Penguin Press. pp. 161–164. ISBN 978-1-59420-153-0.
  23. ^ Carboneau, Clark (2005). "Using Diffusion of Innovations and Academic Detailing to Spread Evidence-based Practices". Journal for Healthcare Quality. 27 (2): 48–52. doi:10.1111/j.1945-1474.2005.tb01117.x. PMID 16190312. S2CID 6946662.
  24. ^ Beal, George M.; Bohlen, Joe M. (November 1981). "The Diffusion Process" (PDF). Special Report No. 18. Iowa State University of Science and Technology of Ames, Iowa. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-04-08. Retrieved 2008-11-11.
  25. ^ De Vany, A.; D. Walls (1999). "Uncertainty in the movie industry: does star power reduce the terror of the box office?". Journal of Cultural Economics. 23 (4): 285–318. doi:10.1023/a:1007608125988. S2CID 54614446.
  26. ^ Walden, Eric; Browne, Glenn (2002). "Information Cascades in the Adoption of New Technology". ICIS Proceedings.
  27. ^ Farnsworth, Ward (2007). The Legal Analyst: A Toolkit for Thinking about the Law. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-23835-7. OCLC 76828864.[page needed]
  28. ^ Chatzimichael, Konstantinos; Genius, Margarita; Tzouvelekas, Vangelis (December 2014). "Informational cascades and technology adoption: Evidence from Greek and German organic growers" (PDF). Food Policy. 49: 186–195. doi:10.1016/j.foodpol.2014.08.001.
  29. ^ Wagner, Helmut; Berger, Wolfram (June 2004). "Globalization, Financial Volatility and Monetary Policy". Empirica. 31 (2–3): 163–184. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.466.2938. doi:10.1007/s10633-004-0915-4. S2CID 53471608.
  30. ^ Passmore, L. (2011). Ulrike Meinhof and the Red Army Faction: Performing Terrorism. Springer. ISBN 978-0-230-37077-7. OCLC 904285976.[page needed]
  31. ^ Hamlett, Patrick W.; Cobb, Michael D. (November 2006). "Potential Solutions to Public Deliberation Problems: Structured Deliberations and Polarization Cascades". Policy Studies Journal. 34 (4): 629–648. doi:10.1111/j.1541-0072.2006.00195.x.
  32. ^ Drezner, Daniel W. (2010). "Weighing the Scales: The Internet's Effect On State-Society Relations". The Brown Journal of World Affairs. 16 (2): 31–44. JSTOR 24590907.
edit