Humans and other intelligent agents often rely on collective decision making based on an intuition that groups outperform individuals. However, at present, we lack a complete theoretical understanding of when groups perform better. Here we examine performance in collective decision-making in the context of a real-world citizen science task environment in which individuals with manipulated differences in task relevant training collaborated. We find 1) dyads gradually improve in performance but do not experience a collective benet compared to individuals in most situations; 2) the cost of coordination to efficiency and speed that results when switching to a dyadic context after training individually is consistently larger than the leverage of...
Group decision tasks that require pooling of information to reach the best decision have been studie...
How can a human collective coordinate, for example to move a banquet table, wheneach person is influ...
The average judgment of large numbers of people has been found to be consistently better than the be...
Humans and other intelligent agents often rely on collective decision making based on an intuition t...
We report the results of a game-theoretic experiment with human players who solve problems of increa...
We study how humans make decisions when they collaborate with an artificial intelligence (AI) in a s...
We study how humans make decisions when they collaborate with an artificial intelligence (AI): each ...
An important potential advantage of group-living that has been mostly neglected by life scientists i...
Interacting to reach a shared decision is an omnipresent component of human collaboration. We explor...
Due to growing automatization, and interconnectivity of decision-makers worldwide, global problems w...
Interacting to reach a shared decision is an omnipresent component of human collaboration. We explor...
When people perform simple actions, they often behave efficiently, minimizing the costs of movement ...
AbstractProject performance is contingent upon the continuous ability of key decision-makers to coll...
Models of crowdsourcing and human computation often assume that individuals independently carry out ...
Previous research has shown that two heads working together can outperform one working alone, but wh...
Group decision tasks that require pooling of information to reach the best decision have been studie...
How can a human collective coordinate, for example to move a banquet table, wheneach person is influ...
The average judgment of large numbers of people has been found to be consistently better than the be...
Humans and other intelligent agents often rely on collective decision making based on an intuition t...
We report the results of a game-theoretic experiment with human players who solve problems of increa...
We study how humans make decisions when they collaborate with an artificial intelligence (AI) in a s...
We study how humans make decisions when they collaborate with an artificial intelligence (AI): each ...
An important potential advantage of group-living that has been mostly neglected by life scientists i...
Interacting to reach a shared decision is an omnipresent component of human collaboration. We explor...
Due to growing automatization, and interconnectivity of decision-makers worldwide, global problems w...
Interacting to reach a shared decision is an omnipresent component of human collaboration. We explor...
When people perform simple actions, they often behave efficiently, minimizing the costs of movement ...
AbstractProject performance is contingent upon the continuous ability of key decision-makers to coll...
Models of crowdsourcing and human computation often assume that individuals independently carry out ...
Previous research has shown that two heads working together can outperform one working alone, but wh...
Group decision tasks that require pooling of information to reach the best decision have been studie...
How can a human collective coordinate, for example to move a banquet table, wheneach person is influ...
The average judgment of large numbers of people has been found to be consistently better than the be...