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Main Authors: Burgess, M., Dunbar, R. I. M.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.10845
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author Burgess, M.
Dunbar, R. I. M.
author_facet Burgess, M.
Dunbar, R. I. M.
contents The human capacity for working together and with tools builds on cognitive abilities that, while not unique to humans, are most developed in humans both in scale and plasticity. Our capacity to engage with collaborators and with technology requires a continuous expenditure of attentive work that we show may be understood in terms of what is heuristically argued as`trust' in socio-economic fields. By adopting a `social physics' of information approach, we are able to bring dimensional analysis to bear on an anthropological-economic issue. The cognitive-economic trade-off between group size and rate of attention to detail is the connection between these. This allows humans to scale cooperative effort across groups, from teams to communities, with a trade-off between group size and attention. We show here that an accurate concept of trust follows a bipartite `economy of work' model, and that this leads to correct predictions about the statistical distribution of group sizes in society. Trust is essentially a cognitive-economic issue that depends on the memory cost of past behaviour and on the frequency of attentive policing of intent. All this leads to the characteristic `fractal' structure for human communities. The balance between attraction to some alpha attractor and dispersion due to conflict fully explains data from all relevant sources. The implications of our method suggest a broad applicability beyond purely social groupings to general resource constrained interactions, e.g. in work, technology, cybernetics, and generalized socio-economic systems of all kinds.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2410_10845
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle A Quantitative Model Of Trust as a Predictor of Social Group Sizes and its Implications for Technology
Burgess, M.
Dunbar, R. I. M.
Physics and Society
C.2.6; K.4.2
The human capacity for working together and with tools builds on cognitive abilities that, while not unique to humans, are most developed in humans both in scale and plasticity. Our capacity to engage with collaborators and with technology requires a continuous expenditure of attentive work that we show may be understood in terms of what is heuristically argued as`trust' in socio-economic fields. By adopting a `social physics' of information approach, we are able to bring dimensional analysis to bear on an anthropological-economic issue. The cognitive-economic trade-off between group size and rate of attention to detail is the connection between these. This allows humans to scale cooperative effort across groups, from teams to communities, with a trade-off between group size and attention. We show here that an accurate concept of trust follows a bipartite `economy of work' model, and that this leads to correct predictions about the statistical distribution of group sizes in society. Trust is essentially a cognitive-economic issue that depends on the memory cost of past behaviour and on the frequency of attentive policing of intent. All this leads to the characteristic `fractal' structure for human communities. The balance between attraction to some alpha attractor and dispersion due to conflict fully explains data from all relevant sources. The implications of our method suggest a broad applicability beyond purely social groupings to general resource constrained interactions, e.g. in work, technology, cybernetics, and generalized socio-economic systems of all kinds.
title A Quantitative Model Of Trust as a Predictor of Social Group Sizes and its Implications for Technology
topic Physics and Society
C.2.6; K.4.2
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.10845