Eliminating Majority Illusion Is Easy

Authors

  • Jack Dippel McGill University
  • Max Dupré la Tour McGill University
  • April Niu McGill University
  • Sanjukta Roy Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata, india University of Leeds
  • Adrian Vetta McGill University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v39i13.33504

Abstract

Majority illusion is a phenomenon in social networks wherein the decision by the majority of the network is not the same as one's personal social circle's majority, leading to an incorrect perception of the majority in a large network. We present polynomial-time algorithms which completely eliminate majority illusion by altering as few connections in the network as possible. Eliminating majority illusion ensures each neighbourhood in the network has at least a 1/2-fraction of the majority winner. This result is surprising as partially eliminating majority illusion is NP-hard. We generalize the majority illusion problem to an arbitrary fraction p and show that the problem of ensuring all neighbourhoods in the network contain at least a p-fraction of nodes consistent with a given preference is NP-hard, for nearly all values of p.

Published

2025-04-11

How to Cite

Dippel, J., Dupré la Tour, M., Niu, A., Roy, S., & Vetta, A. (2025). Eliminating Majority Illusion Is Easy. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 39(13), 13763-13770. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v39i13.33504

Issue

Section

AAAI Technical Track on Game Theory and Economic Paradigms