Abstract When sharing a common goal, confident and competent members are often motivated to contribute to the group, boosting its decision performance. However, it is unclear whether this process remains effective when members can opt in or out of group decisions and prioritize individual interests. Our laboratory experiment (n = 63) and cognitive modeling showed that at the individual level, confidence, competence, and a preference for risk motivated participants’ opt-out decisions. We then analyzed the group-level accuracy of majority decisions by creating many virtual groups of 25 members resampled from the 63 participants in the experiment. Whereas the majority decisions by voters who preferred to participate in group decision making we...
The recent literature on individual vs. group decision-making, in risky contexts, has brought about ...
According to the classic results of Galton and Condorcet, as well as in modern decision-making model...
<div><p>It is often unclear which factor plays a more critical role in determining a group's perform...
Abstract When sharing a common goal, confident and competent members are often motivated to contribu...
In organizational groups, often a majority has aligned preferences that oppose those of a minority. ...
In organizational groups, often a majority has aligned preferences that oppose those of a minority. ...
The effectiveness of decision-making teams depends largely on their ability to integrate and make se...
The use of majority rule voting in group decision making is pervasive within democratic societies. G...
Majority rule is, generally speaking, not an optimal decision-making process. Impor-tant among its a...
If each member of a group makes less accurate decisions than those of another group, can the former ...
The majority rule has attracted much attention in recent debate on preference for aggregation strate...
This paper investigates the rationality of group decisions versus individual decisions under risk. W...
International audienceAbstract Mathematical models and simulations demonstrate the power of majority...
Recent research in group cognition points towards the existence of collective cognitive competencies...
Recent research in group cognition points towards the existence of collective cognitive competencies...
The recent literature on individual vs. group decision-making, in risky contexts, has brought about ...
According to the classic results of Galton and Condorcet, as well as in modern decision-making model...
<div><p>It is often unclear which factor plays a more critical role in determining a group's perform...
Abstract When sharing a common goal, confident and competent members are often motivated to contribu...
In organizational groups, often a majority has aligned preferences that oppose those of a minority. ...
In organizational groups, often a majority has aligned preferences that oppose those of a minority. ...
The effectiveness of decision-making teams depends largely on their ability to integrate and make se...
The use of majority rule voting in group decision making is pervasive within democratic societies. G...
Majority rule is, generally speaking, not an optimal decision-making process. Impor-tant among its a...
If each member of a group makes less accurate decisions than those of another group, can the former ...
The majority rule has attracted much attention in recent debate on preference for aggregation strate...
This paper investigates the rationality of group decisions versus individual decisions under risk. W...
International audienceAbstract Mathematical models and simulations demonstrate the power of majority...
Recent research in group cognition points towards the existence of collective cognitive competencies...
Recent research in group cognition points towards the existence of collective cognitive competencies...
The recent literature on individual vs. group decision-making, in risky contexts, has brought about ...
According to the classic results of Galton and Condorcet, as well as in modern decision-making model...
<div><p>It is often unclear which factor plays a more critical role in determining a group's perform...