Collective wisdom in polarized groups

J. Bak-Coleman, C. K. Tokita, Dylan H. Morris, D. Rubenstein, I. Couzin
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

The potential for groups to outperform the cognitive capabilities of even highly skilled individuals, known as the “wisdom of the crowd”, is crucial to the functioning of democratic institutions. In recent years, increasing polarization has led to concern about its effects on the accuracy of electorates, juries, courts, and congress. While there is empirical evidence of collective wisdom in partisan crowds, a general theory has remained elusive. Central to the challenge is the difficulty of disentangling the effect of limited interaction between opposing groups (homophily) from their tendency to hold opposing viewpoints (partisanship). To overcome this challenge, we develop an agent-based model of collective wisdom parameterized by the experimentally-measured behaviour of participants across the political spectrum. In doing so, we reveal that differences across the political spectrum in how individuals express and respond to knowledge interact with the structure of the network to either promote or undermine wisdom. We verify these findings experimentally and construct a more general theoretical framework. Finally, we provide evidence that incidental, context-specific differences across the political spectrum likely determine the impact of polarization. Overall, our results show that whether polarized groups benefit from collective wisdom is generally predictable but highly context-specific.
两极分化群体的集体智慧
群体的认知能力甚至超过高技能个人的潜力,即所谓的“群体智慧”,对民主制度的运作至关重要。近年来,两极分化的加剧引起了人们对其对选民、陪审团、法院和国会准确性的影响的担忧。虽然有经验证据表明党派群体中存在集体智慧,但一个普遍的理论仍然难以捉摸。挑战的核心是很难将对立群体之间有限互动的影响(同质性)与他们持有对立观点的倾向(党派关系)区分开来。为了克服这一挑战,我们开发了一个基于主体的集体智慧模型,该模型由不同政治派别参与者的实验测量行为参数化。在这样做的过程中,我们揭示了不同政治派别在个人如何表达和回应知识方面的差异与网络结构的相互作用,从而促进或破坏智慧。我们通过实验验证了这些发现,并构建了一个更一般的理论框架。最后,我们提供的证据表明,政治光谱中偶然的、特定背景的差异可能决定了两极分化的影响。总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,两极分化的群体是否从集体智慧中受益,通常是可以预测的,但高度具体到具体情况。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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