<div><p>Crowds can often make better decisions than individuals or small groups of experts by leveraging their ability to aggregate diverse information. Question answering sites, such as Stack Exchange, rely on the “wisdom of crowds” effect to identify the best answers to questions asked by users. We analyze data from 250 communities on the Stack Exchange network to pinpoint factors affecting which answers are chosen as the best answers. Our results suggest that, rather than evaluate all available answers to a question, users rely on simple cognitive heuristics to choose an answer to vote for or accept. These cognitive heuristics are linked to an answer’s salience, such as the order in which it is listed and how much screen space it occupie...
The "wisdom of the crowd" phenomenon is when an aggregated group answer to a problem is more accurat...
Groups have access to more diverse information and typically outperform individuals on problem solvi...
International audienceDoes discussion in large groups help or hinder the wisdom of crowds? To give r...
Crowds can often make better decisions than individuals or small groups of experts by leveraging the...
Crowdsourcing can identify high-quality solutions to problems; however, individual decisions are con...
Groups have access to more diverse information and typically outperform individuals on problem solvi...
We leverage crowd wisdom for multiple-choice ques-tion answering, and employ lightweight machine lea...
Aggregates of many judgments tend to outperform each of the individual judgments that compose the ag...
Published online: 08 October 2020Teams, juries, electorates, and committees must often select from v...
This paper presents an online prospective study investigating whether the strength of social feedbac...
The questions in a crowdsourcing task typically exhibit varying degrees of difficulty and subjectivi...
Objective: To investigate whether strength of social feedback, i.e. other people who concur (or do n...
Teams, juries, electorates, and committees must often select from various alternative courses of act...
Teams, juries, electorates, and committees must often select from various alternative courses of act...
Individuals today discuss information and form judgements as crowds in online communities and platfo...
The "wisdom of the crowd" phenomenon is when an aggregated group answer to a problem is more accurat...
Groups have access to more diverse information and typically outperform individuals on problem solvi...
International audienceDoes discussion in large groups help or hinder the wisdom of crowds? To give r...
Crowds can often make better decisions than individuals or small groups of experts by leveraging the...
Crowdsourcing can identify high-quality solutions to problems; however, individual decisions are con...
Groups have access to more diverse information and typically outperform individuals on problem solvi...
We leverage crowd wisdom for multiple-choice ques-tion answering, and employ lightweight machine lea...
Aggregates of many judgments tend to outperform each of the individual judgments that compose the ag...
Published online: 08 October 2020Teams, juries, electorates, and committees must often select from v...
This paper presents an online prospective study investigating whether the strength of social feedbac...
The questions in a crowdsourcing task typically exhibit varying degrees of difficulty and subjectivi...
Objective: To investigate whether strength of social feedback, i.e. other people who concur (or do n...
Teams, juries, electorates, and committees must often select from various alternative courses of act...
Teams, juries, electorates, and committees must often select from various alternative courses of act...
Individuals today discuss information and form judgements as crowds in online communities and platfo...
The "wisdom of the crowd" phenomenon is when an aggregated group answer to a problem is more accurat...
Groups have access to more diverse information and typically outperform individuals on problem solvi...
International audienceDoes discussion in large groups help or hinder the wisdom of crowds? To give r...