International audienceIn our digital and connected societies, the development of social networks, online shopping, and reputation systems raises the questions of how individuals use social information and how it affects their decisions. We report experiments performed in France and Japan, in which subjects could update their estimates after having received information from other subjects. We measure and model the impact of this social information at individual and collective scales. We observe and justify that, when individuals have little prior knowledge about a quantity, the distribution of the logarithm of their estimates is close to a Cauchy distribution. We find that social influence helps the group improve its properly defined collect...
Abstract in Undetermined There has been much interest in group judgment and the so-called 'wisdom of...
Research on the wisdom of crowds is motivated by the observation that the average belief in a large ...
Teams, juries, electorates, and committees must often select from various alternative courses of act...
Digital technologies deeply impact the way that people interact. Therefore, it is crucial to underst...
International audienceA major problem that resulted from the massive use of social media networks is...
Cognitive biases are widespread in humans and animals alike, and can sometimes be reinforced by soci...
<div><p>Groups can make precise collective estimations in cases like the weight of an object or the ...
Aggregating multiple non-expert opinions into a collective estimate can improve accuracy across many...
In this thesis, we were interested in the impact of the quantity and quality of information ex- chan...
Research on the wisdom of crowds is motivated by the observation that the average belief in a large ...
Social information use is widespread in the animal kingdom, helping individuals rapidly acquire usef...
Social visualization systems have emerged to support collective intelligence-driven analysis of a gr...
Following Griffiths and Tenenbaum (2006), we explore whether people use relevant social information ...
Social information enables individuals to reduce uncertainty and increase decision accuracy across a...
The present thesis investigates social learning processes in quantitative estimation tasks with a fo...
Abstract in Undetermined There has been much interest in group judgment and the so-called 'wisdom of...
Research on the wisdom of crowds is motivated by the observation that the average belief in a large ...
Teams, juries, electorates, and committees must often select from various alternative courses of act...
Digital technologies deeply impact the way that people interact. Therefore, it is crucial to underst...
International audienceA major problem that resulted from the massive use of social media networks is...
Cognitive biases are widespread in humans and animals alike, and can sometimes be reinforced by soci...
<div><p>Groups can make precise collective estimations in cases like the weight of an object or the ...
Aggregating multiple non-expert opinions into a collective estimate can improve accuracy across many...
In this thesis, we were interested in the impact of the quantity and quality of information ex- chan...
Research on the wisdom of crowds is motivated by the observation that the average belief in a large ...
Social information use is widespread in the animal kingdom, helping individuals rapidly acquire usef...
Social visualization systems have emerged to support collective intelligence-driven analysis of a gr...
Following Griffiths and Tenenbaum (2006), we explore whether people use relevant social information ...
Social information enables individuals to reduce uncertainty and increase decision accuracy across a...
The present thesis investigates social learning processes in quantitative estimation tasks with a fo...
Abstract in Undetermined There has been much interest in group judgment and the so-called 'wisdom of...
Research on the wisdom of crowds is motivated by the observation that the average belief in a large ...
Teams, juries, electorates, and committees must often select from various alternative courses of act...