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The marginal majority effect: when social influence produces lock-in

Author

Listed:
  • Alexandros Gelastopoulos

    (IAST - Institute for Advanced Study in Toulouse)

  • Pantelis Analytis

    (Unknown)

  • Gael Le Mens

    (Unknown)

  • Arnout van de Rijt

    (Unknown)

Abstract

People are influenced by the choices of others, a phenomenon observed across contexts in the social and behavioral sciences. Social influence can lock in an initial popularity advantage of an option over a higher quality alternative. Yet several experiments designed to enable social influence have found that social systems self-correct rather than lock-in. Here we identify a behavioral phenomenon that makes inferior lock-in possible, which we call the ‘marginal majority effect': A discontinuous increase in the choice probability of an option as its popularity exceeds that of a competing option. We demonstrate the existence of marginal majority effects in several recent experiments and show that lock-in always occurs when the effect is large enough to offset the quality effect on choice, but rarely otherwise. Our results reconcile conflicting past empirical evidence and connect a behavioral phenomenon to the possibility of social lock-in.

Suggested Citation

  • Alexandros Gelastopoulos & Pantelis Analytis & Gael Le Mens & Arnout van de Rijt, 2025. "The marginal majority effect: when social influence produces lock-in," Working Papers hal-04991399, HAL.
  • Handle: RePEc:hal:wpaper:hal-04991399
    Note: View the original document on HAL open archive server: https://hal.science/hal-04991399v1
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