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Serge Galam

Researcher at Centre national de la recherche scientifique

Publications -  216
Citations -  7256

Serge Galam is an academic researcher from Centre national de la recherche scientifique. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ising model & Voting. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 209 publications receiving 6658 citations. Previous affiliations of Serge Galam include Tel Aviv University & École Polytechnique.

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Minority opinion spreading in random geometry

TL;DR: In this paper, the diffusion reaction model was used to study the spread of the minority opinion in public debates, where people move by discrete step on a landscape of random geometry shaped by social life.
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Sociophysics: a review of galam models

TL;DR: In this article, a series of models of sociophysics introduced by Galam and Galam et al. in the last 25 years were reviewed and several real political events were successfully predicted including the French extreme right party in the 2000 first round of French presidential elections, the voting at fifty-fifty in several democratic countries (Germany, Italy, Mexico, and the victory of the "no" to the 2005 French referendum on the European constitution).
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Sociophysics: A new approach of sociological collective behaviour. I. mean‐behaviour description of a strike

TL;DR: In this article, a new approach to the understanding of sociological collective behaviour based on the framework of critical phenomena in physics is presented, where a simple mean-behaviour model is applied to a strike process in a plant.
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Towards a theory of collective phenomena: Consensus and attitude changes in groups.

TL;DR: In this paper, a symmetry-breaking model for collective phenomena is presented, which combines a number of well-established social psychology hypotheses with recent concepts of statistical physics, and the conceptual analysis of the assumed mechanisms reveals that when we deal with phenomena that have until now been designated as polarization phenomena, we are faced with a whole class of phenomena.
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Modeling Radicalization Phenomena in Heterogeneous Populations.

TL;DR: The required minimum individual core involvement to actually curb radicalization is calculated and is found to be a function of both the majority or minority status of the sensitive subpopulation with respect to the core subpopulation and the degree of activeness of opponents.