Effective group size of majority vote accuracy in sequential decision-making

We investigate a sequential decision-making situation wherein, with a certain probability, each voter imitates the decision of another voter who has already made a decision; otherwise, she makes a decision independently. After all individuals reach decisions, the group decision is determined using the simple majority rule. To evaluate the collective performance in this situation, we introduce the concept of effective group size, which measures how many independent voters are needed to obtain the same majority vote accuracy realized by non-independent sequential votes. We have found the deterioration of majority vote accuracy by imitation behavior of voters, and quantified it by a decrease in the effective group size. We argue that this decline in the majority vote accuracy is caused by the two factors: a decrease in the number of independent voters and an increase in the disparity of influences of voters on succeeding voters’ decisions.


Introduction
Human society heavily depends on the performance of group decision making. Decisions on what kind of international treaty to conclude, which presidential candidate to choose, and whether to raise a tax or not influence our quality of life. Further, group decision making has recently attracted attention in not only social sciences but also biology (e.g., [12,20,24]). This has occurred because in the biological context, group decision accuracy can affect each group member's reproduction and survival, as observed in migration decisions, foraging decisions, and decisions on collective activities [10,11]. Thus, analyzing the conditions that enhance or deteriorate group decision accuracy would lead to a better understanding of both human and non-human societies.
In theoretical studies, Condorcet's jury theorem has been a highly stylized benchmark for examining the accuracy of group decision making. This theorem considers the situation where a group must choose the correct option from two alternatives. The probability of choosing the correct option is assumed to be p for all voters. When each voter makes a decision independently, the probability that the majority vote is correct is where N (odd) is the group size. This theorem states that if p is greater (less) than one-half, majority vote accuracy P N is an increasing (decreasing) function of the group size N . Other extensions of this theorem exist: supermajority rule [14], hierarchal voting [6], game theoretic situations [1,3], and logically interconnected multiple agenda [15,25]. Furthermore, researchers have relaxed the assumptions of independence because, when one takes influences of social interactions into account, it is easy to dispute the assumption of independence. Boland et al. [9] investigate how dependence among voters affects majority vote accuracy by modeling the situation where all individuals can refer to the same opinion leader. In addition, a series of studies by Berg [4,5] and Ladha [21][22][23] deals with the aggregation of dependent votes, in which the probability of multiple individuals' making a correct decision simultaneously differs from the product of the probabilities of each player's making a correct decision. Almost all studies so far have assumed simultaneous decision making or ignored the process that generates dependence among individuals. However, in reality, the times of making decisions are often non-simultaneous among individuals. For example, as Banerjee [2] noted, decisions on what restaurants to choose, what academic research topics to work on, and how many children to have are influenced by opinions of people who have already made such decisions. Thus, imitation processes associated with that fact should be considered. Theoretical studies on information cascade have often dealt with non-simultaneous decision-making timings. For example, in their influential study, Bikhchandani et al. [7] considered the sequential decision-making situation where each individual intends to choose a correct option by referring to the decisions of all predecessors. In this framework they examined the likelihood of correct decisions made by succeeding individuals.
In the present study, to obtain better insight on the accuracy of non-simultaneous collective decision making, we introduce a novel concept in this research field, effective group size. This concept helps us to quantitatively decompose the deterioration of majority vote accuracy in the process of sequential decision-making into two factors. This paper proceeds as follows. Section 2 constructs a model. Section 3 evaluates to what extent majority vote accuracy deteriorates through a sequential decision-making process by using multiple criteria. Section 4 provides an intuitive explanation of the deterioration and concludes the paper.

Model
A group of N voters faces a dichotomous choice problem. The correct alternative is determined a priori. Voters sequentially make decisions. Once a voter makes a decision, she never changes it. Throughout this study, we call voters who have not made decisions yet at a given time undecided voters. Voters who have already reached decisions are called decided voters. We here assume naïve voters who do not know the number of total votes for each choice. Those naïve voters do not know whether others have already reached decisions either, before they directly refer to them. To model this social process, our model contains undecided voters as well as decided voters.
In an elementary step of update, a focal voter is chosen randomly from the undecided voters. With probability 1 − s, the focal voter makes a decision independently. In this case, the focal voter makes a correct/wrong decision with probabilities p and 1 − p, respectively, and this elementary step ends. Note that p can be interpreted as the voter's competence or the reliability of the information that the voter receives. With the remaining probability of s, the focal voter randomly chooses another voter from the entire group as an exemplar. The focal voter imitates the exemplar's decision if the exemplar has already made a decision, and nothing happens otherwise. This ends the elementary step. These elementary steps of update repeat until all individuals reach decisions. We assume that at the initial state no one has made a decision. Thus, if s = 1, the first focal voter cannot refer to anyone. Therefore, for s = 1 we assume that the first focal voter is forced to make a decision independently, and then all subsequent voters imitate another voter's decision. After all individuals made decisions, the group decision is determined using the simple majority rule. Therefore, when s = 0, the situation is identical to the independent voting assumed in Condorcet's jury theorem. We call the model described above Model 1.
Among decided voters, those who have already reached decisions independently are called independent voters, and those who have reached decisions by imitating another voter are called imitators 1 (see Fig. 1 for classification of the voters). Let X t and Y t be the number of independent voters and that of imitators at time t. We also have their 1 Our notion of imitators is the same as that of copycat voters in the model of [17]. Moreover, our assumption that independent voters and imitators appear randomly is similar to that of [17]. However, as defined in the first paragraph of Sect. 2, our Model 1 allows undecided voters to exist, whereas [17] does not. Owing to the existence of undecided voters, an imitator who samples an undecided voter gives up the imitation, and potentially becomes an independent voter next time. This assumption entails the non-trivial mathematical result for the frequency of independent voters at the final time, which is expressed as Eq. (5) in the next section. Furthermore, although [18] calculates the majority vote accuracy in sequential decision-making, that paper assumes that a herder votes for a candidate obtaining majority vote at the time of the herder's decision-making. frequencies, x t (=X t /N ) and y t (=Y t /N ), respectively. Note that 1 − x t − y t is the frequency of undecided voters at time t. In summary, in an elementary step of update in Model 1, the value of X t (independent voters) increase by one with probability 1 − s, the value of Y t (imitators) increases by one with probability s(x t + y t ), and no changes occur with the remaining probability.
If we focus only on the final frequencies of independent voters and imitators, Model 1 is qualitatively the same as Model 2, which we analyze in Appendix A.

Results
This section analyzes the outcome of our process, with special attention to the resulting majority vote accuracy. First, we calculate the frequency of independent voters when all voters reach decisions (Sect. 3.1). Second, using the concept of effective group size, we demonstrate that the smaller the frequency of independent voters, the worse the majority vote accuracy becomes; however, this phenomenon does not explain the full range of our results (Sect. 3.2). Third, we evaluate the resulting disparity among independent voters' influence on succeeding voters, which proves to be the other factor causing the deterioration of majority vote accuracy (Sects. 3.3 and 3.4).

Frequency of independent voters
Although our model is actually a stochastic process, we approximate the dynamics with differential equations because of its tractability. Note that this approximation is reasonable for a sufficiently large N . The time-change of the frequencies, x t and y t , are described approximately by the following differential equations.
where t * represents the final time when all individuals have made decisions.
Let us derive the final time t * . With z t ≡ x t + y t , we have Note that z 0 = 0 and z t * = 1. By solving Eq. (3) within the range of 0 ≤ t ≤ t * , we obtain Because x t = (1 − s)t from the first equation in Eq.
(2), we have the frequency of independent voters at the final time t * , as Figure 2 compares the frequency of independent voters in an individual-based simulation with that obtained from Eq. (5). This figure indicates that our system of differential equations provides an excellent approximation of the actual stochastic process. Equation (5) and our simulation result show that the value of x t * decreases drastically at around s = 1. This result is in a sharp contrast with the model of Boland et al. [9], where some voters make decisions independently and others imitate a decision of the same entity simultaneously. The resulting frequency of independent decision makers in their model was a linear function of the imitation rate, 1 − s.

Effective group size
Our model is an extension of Condorcet's model relaxing the assumption of independence. To what degree does a decrease in the number of independent voters explain majority vote accuracy? This section provides a criterion to answer that question.

Frequency of independent voters
Imitation rate s As stated in Sect. 1, under the assumption of independence, the probability that the majority vote reaches the correct decision is expressed by Eq. (1). When N is sufficiently large, it can be approximated by the central limit theorem as where erf is the error function, erf(x) ≡ 2 √ π x 0 exp(−z 2 )dz. Equation (6) means that for a given number of group size N we can estimate the accuracy of majority vote of that group, P N , for the case of all votes being completely independent. Therefore Eq. (6) can be used in the opposite direction. Let P * denote the majority vote accuracy obtained in our sequential decision-making model. By substituting P * for P N in Eq. (6), we can calculate the group size N that would lead to the majority vote accuracy P * , if all votes were independent. Hereafter, we write this N as N eff and call it the effective group size. N eff measures how many independent voters are needed to obtain the given majority vote accuracy that was actually realized by dependent voters' judgments. Figure 3 depicts the relationship between the number of all voters, the number of independent voters, and the effective group size. For example, when p = 0.7 and s = 0.7, even if 47 voters actually participate, approximately 24 individuals out of 47 make a decision independently, and the majority vote accuracy of our model corresponds to that of Condorcet's model with approximately 13 independent voters. By comparing the two panels of Fig. 3, we can see that the greater the imitation rate s is, the smaller is the effective population size. Further, the gap between the number of independent voters and the effective group size shown in Fig. 3 implies that the deterioration of majority vote accuracy is not explained solely by the decrease in the  Relationship between the actual group size, the number of independent voters, and effective group size. The horizontal axis indicates the actual group size N . To avoid defining a tie-breaking rule in a majority vote, we treat only the cases where N is an odd number. The vertical axis represents the analytically-predicted number of independent voters at the end of sequential decision making, X t * (solid line, from Eq. (5)), and effective group size N eff (black dots, from Eq. (6)). For reference, a diagonal is shown in the dashed line. The parameters are p = 0.7 and s = 0.3 (left), and p = 0.7 and s = 0.7 (right). To obtain the majority vote accuracy, we implemented 10 4 simulation runs for each pair of N and s number of independent voters. In Sect. 3.3, we consider another factor causing the deterioration of majority vote accuracy.

Relationship between the times at which independent voters make decisions and their influence
The result of Sect. 3.2 indicates that the decrease in the number of independent voters cannot alone explain the complete range of the deterioration of majority vote accuracy.
To identify another factor causing this deterioration, we pay attention to the path of imitations. After all voters reach decisions, we align them in the order of when their made decisions, and name them from 1st to N th voters. Imagine the case where the kth voter imitated the jth voter's decision ( j < k). The jth voter might have also imitated the ith voter's decision (i < j). In this case, we should attribute the kth voter's decision being the same as the ith voter's to the fact that the jth voter imitated the ith voter. This path of imitation implies that the influence of the ith voter reaches not only the jth voter but also the kth voter. Starting from any given focal voter, we go upstream along this path of imitation until we reach an independent voter, and call her the origin of the focal voter. Note that the origin of an independent voter is herself. In contrast, for a given independent voter, those who refer to her as their origin are called this voter's followers. By definition an independent voter is a follower of herself. We call the number of followers one's influence.
We now show that the magnitude of influence of each independent voter is characterized by its order in decision-making. Recall that X t * is the number of independent voters at the final time t * . Hereafter, we call the ith earliest independent voter out of X t * independent voters the q-quantile independent voter, where q = i/ X t * (0 < q ≤ 1). The growth of the frequency of the followers of this q-quantile independent voters is described approximately by the following differential equation: where f q is the frequency of the followers of the q-quantile independent voter, and t q is the time at which the q-quantile independent voter reaches a decision. Equation (7) is not valid before time t q . This equation states that the instantaneous rate of increase of the frequency of followers is s times the frequency of followers at that time. This simplicity comes from the fact that indirect followers are not distinguished from direct followers in considering the diffusion of an origin's decision. The initial condition in Eq. (7) comes from the fact that the origin herself is also counted as her follower. Solving this differential equation, we have Using this result, we can calculate the frequency of followers of the q-quantile independent voter at the final time as follows: Here we have used t q = qt * (easily shown from x t = (1 − s)t) in the second line, and used Eq. (4) in the third line. Obviously, Eq. (9) is a monotonically decreasing function of q. Therefore, sorting voters by the order in which they make decisions is equivalent to sorting their influence from the largest to the smallest. Figure 4 presents the result of individual-based simulations and the analytical approximation obtained by Eq. (9) in one graph. As the figure illustrates, our approximation matches well the expected frequency of followers.

Disparity of influence among independent voters
Next, we observe how the Gini coefficient of the distribution of influence among independent voters changes as the imitation rate s increases in order to explain the relationship between imitation intensity and inequality of influence (see Appendix B for our reason for choosing the Gini coefficient for this purpose). Although the distribution of influence is actually discrete in our model, for simplicity, we pursue this problem by regarding it as a continuous distribution. The Gini coefficient for continuous distributions is defined as follows: where we define q ≡ 1 − q. That is, the q-quantile earliest independent voter is the q -quantile latest independent voter. Moreover, L(q ) is the Lorenz function, which represents the proportion of the followers of 0-quantile to q -quantile independent voters [26] (see also [16]). If all voters have the same numbers of followers, the graph of the Lorenz function (called Lorenz curve) lies on the diagonal. Thus, Eq. (10) suggests that the Gini coefficient is obtained by doubling the area between the diagonal line and the Lorenz curve. A possible value of G ranges from 0 to 1. G = 0 means perfect equality (i.e., all voters have the same number of followers), and G = 1 means perfect inequality (i.e., a single voter is followed by all the remaining voters). From Eq. (9), we have the Lorenz function as: Therefore, from Eq. (10), we have the Gini coefficient G as a function of the imitation rate s as We see that G(s) → 0 as s → 0 and that G(s) → 1 as s → 1. We can also prove the monotonicity of the Gini coefficient as the function of imitation rate s (see Appendix C for the proof). Figure 4 indicates that the earlier a voter makes a decision, the stronger influence that he obtains. It also shows that the imitation rate s increases the inequality of influences. Gini coefficients in Fig. 5 demonstrate that this inequality worsens majority vote accuracy.

Discussion and concluding remarks
This study models the sequential decision-making situation wherein each voter makes a decision at a different time referring to a predecessor's decision, investigates factors that worsen the majority vote accuracy, and evaluates to what degree those factors are responsible. As a result, we find that the deterioration of majority vote accuracy is attributed to two types of mechanisms. First, majority vote accuracy deteriorates as the number of imitators increases, as Fig. 3 illustrates. To understand this process intuitively, let us consider an extreme situation, where a single independent voter is imitated by all the remaining voters. According to Condorcet's jury theorem, majority vote accuracy increases as the group size increases. Nevertheless, in this case, the collective decision is the same as a single voter's decision, and therefore the group loses the advantage of size. This outcome is compatible with [9], who assumed simultaneous correlated voting, although our results differ quantitatively from theirs, as mentioned in Sect. 3.1.
Second, the disparity of influence among independent voters worsens the majority vote accuracy, as Figs. 4 and 5 illustrate. Let us consider the following situation to explain this mechanism. There are three voters making decisions independently. Let us assume that the weights for the three votes are 100, 2, and 1, respectively. The difference among the weights for their votes corresponds to the inequality of influences in our model. Although there are actually three voters, this situation is the same as the case wherein only the first voter casts a vote. That is, because we adopt the simple majority rule, the last two voters cannot affect the collective decision, and the first voter's single vote represents a collective decision. Clearly, the probability of a single voter making an incorrect decision is higher than that of the unweighted majority votes by three voters. Again, this group does not take advantage of its size. This outcome is related to the study by [27], which addressed the optimal weighted majority rule. They proved that the weighted majority voting system in which the weight for the vote by individual i with competence p i is log[ p i /(1 − p i )] maximizes the majority vote accuracy under the assumption that all competences are larger than one-half. Therefore, under the assumption of equally skilled individuals, as in the present study, the majority rule of distributing weights equally to everyone is the optimal weighted majority rule. The inequality of influences represents the deviation from the optimum. In summary, as the imitation rate s increases, the first mechanism is driven, and then the number of independent voters decreases. Further, the inequality of influences among independent voters is generated with increasing s. We have evaluated to what extent the combination of these two mechanisms worsens the majority vote accuracy by using the novel criterion called effective group size.
To highlight the second mechanism, Appendix D compares the majority vote accuracies of two models, which generate the same frequency of independent voters when all voters reach decisions. One is our Model 3, which is a sequential decision-making model. The other is the Model 1 in [9], which describes a simultaneous decisionmaking situation. We find that the two models generate different majority vote accuracies. This implies that in considering the group decision accuracy, not only the frequency of independent voters but also the process through which the frequency is determined or the circumstance in which voters are involved should be taken into account.
Several theoretical studies have previously investigated weighted voting (e.g., [27]). However, in these studies, weights are determined exogenously, and the researchers do not discuss how the weights are determined through social interactions. In contrast, the current study investigates how the distribution of influences, which is qualitatively equivalent to the distribution of weights, generated endogenously in the process of sequential decision-making affects majority vote accuracy. Consequently, we demonstrate that the distribution of influences among independent voters follows an exponential distribution (Eq. (9)). In Appendix E, we show that the conditional distribution of influences among all voters given the voter is an independent voter follows a power-law relationship (see Eq. (32)).
Our model might be too simple to explain the micro-foundation that worsens group decision accuracy. For example, in the present model, voters' competence is assumed to be homogeneous. However, in the real world, individuals with different competences make collective decisions. The assumption of heterogeneous competence raises a new research question (cf., [28]). Studying how the correlation between a voter's competence and imitation rate affects majority vote accuracy would be interesting. Moreover, we treat naïve imitations, whereas in the sequential decision-making model by [7] each individual makes a decision by calculating the probability of each option to be correct based on the observation of all predecessors' actions. Future studies should investigate how different micro-level decision-making processes affect group decision accuracy by incorporating empirical studies. Last, our idea of tracing the path of imitation and then deriving the disparity of influence requires only the imitation rate s, and does not the distribution of competences. Therefore, our idea is expected to be a useful tool for future works.

Appendices Appendix A: A model entailing qualitatively identical results to those shown in the main text
Let us call the following model Model 2, and show that this model is qualitatively identical to Model 1.
In an elementary step of update in this new model, a focal voter is randomly chosen from the undecided voters. With probability 1 − s the focal voter makes a decision independently, and the step ends. With the remaining probability of s, the focal player randomly chooses as an exemplar from the entire group. If the exemplar is a decided voter, the focal voter imitates the exemplar's decision and the step ends. Otherwise, the focal voter's imitation fails, so he reconsiders whether he makes a decision independently or by imitation (chosen with probabilities 1 − s and s, respectively), and repeats the same procedure within the same update step until he becomes a decided voter. That is, once an undecided voter is chosen as a focal voter, he is never put back into the undecided voters' pool. Thus, in each elementary step of update one undecided voter always becomes a decided one; there are no steps at which a focal undecided voter is left undecided. The probability that the value of X t increases by one in an update step is 1−s 1−s+(x t +y t )s , and the probability that the value of Y t increases by one in an update step is (x t +y t )s 1−s+(x t +y t )s . The following system of differential equations describes that situation: x 0 = y 0 = 0, x t * + y t * = 1.

(13)
Because of the factor 1/[(1 − s) + s(x t + y t )], the changes of x t and y t in Model 2 are faster than in Model 1. Indeed, this system never reaches a point where all voters reach decisions within a finite time.
It is known that there always exists the change of time scale τ = φ(t) (where φ is a strictly monotonically increasing) by which the two n-dimensional differential equationsẋ = B(x, t)g(x) andẋ = g(x) can be transformed into each other if B(x, t) is strictly positive, where x is a point in R n (Exercise 4.1.2 in [19]). Thus, we can cancel the term 1/[(1 − s) + s(x t + y t )] in Eq. (13) without changing the shape of trajectory of the system. The resulting system is the same that in as Eq. (2).

Appendix B: A reason for using the Gini coefficient to measure the inequality of influences
Initially, we implement individual-based simulations under the same setup as in Fig. 3 and analyze the relationship between majority vote accuracy and the distribution of the frequencies of followers of independent voters, by using five established criteria: the Gini coefficient 6770, 0.8885), the inverse Simpson's diversity index 1/ X t * i=1 F 2 (0.8948, 0.9739), and the standard deviation of F i (0.7764, 0.9561), where X t * is the number of independent voters at the time of the last voter's decision making, F i is the number of followers of the ith earliest independent voter, andF is the arithmetic means of F i . The two numbers shown after each criterion are the coefficients of determination of a single regression and of a polynomial regression (quadratic model). All regression coefficients are statistically significant at the 0.1 % level. As a result of individual-based simulations and single regression analyses, we find an almost linear relationship between the Gini coefficient and majority vote accuracy (Fig. 3). For this reason, we adopt the Gini coefficient in expectation of its tractability.

Appendix C: Proof for the monotonicity of Gini coefficient
We prove that the following inequality is satisfied for any s.
Instead of proving Ineq. (14) directly, we show that First, we calculate the first and the second order derivatives the left-hand side of Ineq. (15) as follows.

Appendix D: Comparison between the majority vote accuracy in two models that cause the same frequency of independent voters
To emphasize the second mechanism for the deterioration of majority vote accuracy (i.e., disparity of influence), let us provide a model generating the same frequency of independent voters as the Model 1 in Boland et al. [9]. Hereafter we call our new model Model 3 (see Fig. 6) and call Boland et al's Model 1 simply "Boland's model" to avoid confusion. Model 3 repeats the following procedure. First, a focal voter is chosen randomly from undecided voters. Second, the focal voter makes a decision independently with probability 1 − s, and otherwise (with probability s) the focal voter chooses an exemplar from decided voters to imitate her decision. We assume that the first voter always has to make a decision independently. The critical difference from our Model 1 is that imitation never fails in Model 3 because an exemplar is always a decided voter. This stochastic process is approximated by the following differential equations.
We denote by ζ t the frequency of decided voters at time t, which is equal to x t + y t .
Let us consider the dynamics of the frequency of decided voters ζ t . From Eq. (18), we haveζ = 1 and ζ 0 = 0. We can easily have the relationship between the frequency of decided voters and the time, as Overtly, t * = 1, and therefore the frequency of independent voters at time t * is x t * = 1 − s. That is different from Eq. (5), but the same as Boland's model. Next, we compare the majority vote accuracy of Model 3 with that of Boland's model. In Boland's model, a group faces a dichotomous choice problem. This group has N (even) voters and a single opinion leader. That is, the entire group size, N + 1, is odd. Each voter and the leader make decisions correctly with probability p. First, the leader makes a decision independently. After that each voter imitates the leader's decision with probability s; otherwise, he makes a decision independently. Although two voters' decisions can be correlated, two voters' decisions conditioned on the leader's decision are independent, which can be interpreted as a simultaneous decision making situation. The group level decision is determined by simple majority rule. The majority vote accuracy in Boland's model is P N ( p, s) ≡ P(Leader is correct)P(Majority of the voters is correct or a tie | Leader is correct) +P(Leader is wrong)P(Majority of the voters is correct | Leader is wrong) Boland [8] shows that if p > 1/2, P N ( p, s) → 1 as N goes to infinity whenever is satisfied. Under the assumption of p > 1/2, s + (1 − s) p is always greater than 1/2. Thus, by Condorcet's jury theorem, the first term of Eq. (21) converges to p as N tends to infinity. If (1 − s) p is less than 1/2, the second part of Eq. (21) converges to 0 as N tends to infinity. Therefore, if Eq. (22) is not satisfied, P N ( p, s) converges to p (see also [13] for a related work). Figure 7 indicates that the majority vote accuracies of Model 3 and Boland's model are different even though the frequencies of independent voters at the final time in the two models are identical to each other. This difference is caused purely by the difference between the disparities of influence in the two models. To see that, let us calculate the growth of the frequency of an origin's followers. It is formulated approximately by the following differential equation: where, as with Eq. (7), f q is the frequency of followers of the q-quantile independent voter, and t q is the time at which the q-quantile independent voter reaches a decision. This equation states that the instantaneous rate of increase of the frequency of followers is s times the percentage of the frequency of followers to the frequency of decided voters at a moment of time (notice that in Eq. (18), x t + y t = t). Solving Eq. (23), we have This is a decreasing function of q. Interestingly, Eq. (24) is power-law distribution, whereas the counterparts of Models 1 and 2 are exponential distributions (Eq. (9)). Defining q ≡ 1 − q, the Lorenz curve L(q ) is derived as Using this result in Eq. (10), we have the Gini coefficient as On the other hand, in Boland's model, the single leader is the only one who has more than one followers. Each of (1 − s)N independent voters has no other follower than himself. Therefore, the Gini coefficient of Boland's model is derived as The right-hand side of Eq. (27) converges to s as N tends to infinity, which is greater than that of (26) for any s. This means that the disparity of influence is greater than that in Model 3. For this reason, the majority vote accuracy of Boland's model is worse than that of Model 3.

Appendix E: Relationship between the order in which an independent voter makes a decision and the expected number of his followers
In Sect. 3.4, we find the approximated distribution of influences among independent voters. In a similar manner, we can derive the distribution of the numbers of followers of the κ-quantile voter on the condition that he is an independent voter. That is, we examine how many followers the κ-quantile voter would obtain if he were an independent voter. Notice the difference between the κ-quantile voter and the q-quantile independent voter. The former is mathematically defined as follows. All voters can be characterized by the time at which they make decisions regardless of whether they are independent voters or imitators, which means that they can be specified uniquely by the order of decisions. We call the ith earliest voter out of all N voters the κ-quantile voter, with κ = i/N (0 < κ ≤ 1). Let ξ t denote the frequency of decided voters at time t, which is identical to x t + y t . Now let us consider the dynamics of the frequency of decided voters ξ t . From Eq. (2), we haveξ = (1 − s) + sξ t and ξ 0 = 0.
Solving this differential equation, we have To obtain the time at which the κ-quantile voter makes a decision, we solve the following equation: then Substituting Eq. (31) for t q in Eq. (7), we have the required distribution at final time t * , as where φ κ (t * ) is the frequency of followers that the κ-quantile voter obtains at final time t * on the condition that he is an independent voter. Interestingly, this is a powerlaw distribution, while the distribution of influences among independent voters is an exponential distribution. Figure 8 shows that our approximation works well. Moreover, we obtain the Gini coefficient of that distribution. First, the Lorenz curve L(κ ) is derived as where κ is defined as 1−κ. Inserting this result into the definition of the Gini coefficient (Eq. (10)), we have Interestingly, this is identical to Eq. (12).