An agent-based model for understanding the influence of the 11-M terrorist attacks on the 2004 Spanish elections
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/97243Metadatos
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2017Referencia bibliográfica
Knowledge-Based Systems 123 200-216, Elsevier 2017
Resumen
Government, politicians, and mass media generated a large quantity of information after the
bombing attacks in Madrid on the 11th of March 2004. This information had two competing
dimensions on the terrorist group responsible for the attacks: ETA and Al’Qaeda. The framing
theory could explain how this information influenced the Spanish national elections on the 14th of
March, three days after the attacks. We propose to analyze this political scenario using agent-based
modelling to recreate the environment and framing effect of the three days prior to the elections.
Using our model we define several experiments where we observe how media communications
influence agent voters after calibrating the model with real data. These experiments are what-if
scenarios where we analyze alternatives for mass media communication messages and word-of-
mouth behaviours. Our results suggest that the framing effect affected the election results by
influencing voters. These results also outline the aggregated impact of mass media channels and
the different role of each party segment of voters during this period.