Hazard Risk Resilience Magazine Volume 1 Issue1 | Page 12

INTRO | HIGHLIGHTS | FEATURES | FOCUS | PERSPECTIVES | BIOS Social learning In some ways nearly everyone is acquainted with copying something they have seen, heard or read about. The internet is full of this kind of activity on Google, social networking sites like Facebook, and blogs. How people copy each other is also of extreme importance to business. Retail markets, such as the fashion industry, rely heavily on monitoring what people buy. Instead of encouraging individuals to make their own independent decisions about what they wear, clothing companies attempt to influence people’s behaviour in order to get them to buy their products. If a celebrity is seen wearing a pair of shoes, jacket or knickers from a well-known brand, others will often do the same. But it’s not always clear how and why people make the choices they do or why they copy certain things and not others. Why is it that the name ‘Kristi’ was one of the top 100 baby names in the 1970s, but is now not even in the top 1000? Despite a recording industry dominated by digital music, why does vinyl live on? How did the riots in London evoke massive looting and vandalism across cities throughout the UK? There is something about how behaviour and ideas are socially learnt through copying that may hold the answer. Anthropologist Dr Alex Bentley and economist Dr Paul Ormerod discovered something unique about human behaviour when people were presented with information about health scares such as the avian influenza or ‘bird flu’ epidemic in 2005 and the H1N1 virus in 2009, better known as ‘swine flu’. Their research revealed that interest in health scares actually spreads socially rather than through people making actual physical contact with disease. This of course doesn’t mean that all health scares are solely driven socially, but it does say something about how they spread rapidly and can be managed. Human behaviour, like other forms of animal behaviour, is learnt socially. But what makes humans unique is that they can imitate each other socially like no other animal that has come before them. Many kinds of animals including birds and even fish have their own kinds of ‘culture’, but none are as good as humans in imitating each others’ behaviour. “Humans are, first and foremost, social creatures. In fact, our brains have actually evolved to handle social relations, and to learn from others rather than have to ‘re-invent the wheel’ each time individually”, says Bentley. In 2005, during the height of the bird flu scare, President George W Bush delivered a speech in the US warning people about the spread of the bird flu virus. This may have been the tipping point for public awareness of bird flu as many people were already online and searching Google for further information about the disease. After Bush made his speech the imitated searches on Google for bird flu rose rapidly. The announcement made by a pivotal political figure had led to a sudden exceptional spike in web searches beyond the normal envelope of change and became a new trend. The internet reveals a number of interesting things about how people copy each others’ behaviour, that along with other examples, have been used to question older models scientists have used to study human behaviour. Time and time again we witness how focused social learning by a few gets amplified as copying by the masses”, says Bentley. The internet has only amplified this form of social copying and understanding how this behaviour works may allow warnings about disease or other hazards to be released more strategically. While tipping point has become extremely popular and social learning likely has something to do with how its use has spread throughout academia and the media alike, what might it actually describe about the physical world? The inventiveness of baby names in the US has tripled since the early 1990s (grey line – girls, black line – boys): Many scientists are moving away from the idea that individuals are rational, autonomous agents, but instead are much more susceptible to the behaviour of those around them, leading them to be influenced socially in a variety of different ways. “Social influence is a better model than the ‘rational actor’ especially for certain phenomena, such as how buzz words propagate and how ideas spread; how the swine flu scare became an epidemic; or even how science makes its progress. Lorenz attractors. Bifurcations occur when small changes in a system lead to a sudden big change, causing the system to divide into two or more. Above: Bentley A and Ormerod P. ‘Accelerated innovation and increased spatial diversity of US popular culture’. Advances in Complex Systems (ACS). http://www.paulormerod.com/pdf/BentleyOrmerod_ACS.pdf