There is a newer version of the record available.

Published April 24, 2026 | Version 1.1
Working paper Open

The Bluem Constant (B₀): A Conceptual Parameter for Modeling Minority-Driven System Sensitivity

Authors/Creators

  • 1. Author and Researcher in Human–AI Interaction and Cognitive Systems Theory

Description

This conceptual note introduces the Bluem Constant (B₀), a model-relative baseline parameter representing the structurally persistent presence of norm-deviating segments within a population.

Across fields such as political sociology, social psychology, and economic modeling, empirical research consistently identifies minority segments whose behavior deviates from dominant norms. However, these findings are heterogeneous across contexts and are typically not directly transferable into generalized system models.

The Bluem Constant addresses this gap by providing a synthetic, non-empirical parameter that enables consistent modeling of minority-driven system sensitivity and behavioral conversion dynamics. Unlike threshold or critical mass concepts, B₀ does not represent a tipping point or transition threshold, but a baseline reference for sensitivity analysis across scenarios.

A minimal illustrative model demonstrates how B₀ interacts with conversion dynamics and system participation, highlighting how structurally persistent minority segments may produce non-linear aggregate effects under conditions of constraint.

The parameter is intended for analytical use in conceptual and formal models and does not provide empirical estimation. Its primary function is to enable cross-context comparability and to integrate structurally persistent minority effects into system-level analysis.

Files

Bluem_2026_The_Bluem_Constant_EN_V1.1.pdf

Files (143.1 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:5d0b58ed480d56de2ac56b200bb0139f
143.1 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Is referenced by
Working paper: 10.5281/zenodo.19614593 (DOI)
Is supplement to
Working paper: 10.5281/zenodo.19713407 (DOI)

Dates

Created
2026-04-23
Issued
2026-04-24
first issued on Zenodo
Copyrighted
2026-04-23
Copyright (c) 2026 Thomas A. Blüm