Publication | Closed Access
Signal-detection analysis of group decision making.
212
Citations
44
References
2001
Year
Group PhenomenonBehavioral Decision MakingCognitionHuman Performance ModelingSocial SciencesSignal-detection AnalysisBiasManagementSignal DetectionDecision TheoryCollective CognitionVisual Detection TaskDetection ModelCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesExperimental PsychologySignal ProcessingGroup CommunicationSignal-detection TheoryDecision ScienceSmall Group Research
How effectively can groups of people make yes-or-no decisions? To answer this question, we used signal-detection theory to model the behavior of groups of human participants in a visual detection task. The detection model specifies how performance depends on the group's size, the competence of the members, the correlation among members' judgments, the constraints on member interaction, and the group's decision rule. The model also allows specification of performance efficiency, which is a measure of how closely a group's performance matches the statistically optimal group. The performance of our groups was consistent with the theoretical predictions, but efficiency decreased as group size increased. This result was attributable to a decrease in the effort that members gave to their individual tasks rather than to an inefficiency in combining the information in the members' judgments.
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