How social information can improve estimation accuracy in human groups

被引:58
|
作者
Jayles, Bertrand [1 ,2 ]
Kim, Hye-rin [3 ]
Escobedo, Ramon [2 ]
Cezera, Stephane [4 ]
Blanchet, Adrien [5 ,6 ]
Kameda, Tatsuya [7 ]
Sire, Clement [1 ]
Theraulaz, Guy [2 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Toulouse Paul Sabatier, CNRS, Lab Phys Theor, F-31062 Toulouse, France
[2] Univ Toulouse, CNRS, Ctr Biol Integrat, Ctr Rech Cognit Anim, F-31062 Toulouse, France
[3] Hokkaido Univ, Dept Behav Sci, Sapporo, Hokkaido 0600810, Japan
[4] Univ Toulouse Capitole, INRA, Toulouse Sch Econ, F-31000 Toulouse, France
[5] Inst Adv Study Toulouse, F-31015 Toulouse, France
[6] Univ Toulouse Capitole, Toulouse Sch Econ, F-31000 Toulouse, France
[7] Univ Tokyo, Dept Social Psychol, Tokyo 1130033, Japan
基金
日本学术振兴会;
关键词
social influence; wisdom of crowds; collective intelligence; self-organization; computational modeling; WORD-OF-MOUTH; WISDOM; ADVICE; CROWD;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.1703695114
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
In 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 collective accuracy. We quantify the improvement of the group estimation when additional controlled and reliable information is provided, unbeknownst to the subjects. We show that subjects' sensitivity to social influence permits us to define five robust behavioral traits and increases with the difference between personal and group estimates. We then use our data to build and calibrate a model of collective estimation to analyze the impact on the group performance of the quantity and quality of information received by individuals. The model quantitatively reproduces the distributions of estimates and the improvement of collective performance and accuracy observed in our experiments. Finally, our model predicts that providing a moderate amount of incorrect information to individuals can counterbalance the human cognitive bias to systematically underestimate quantities and thereby improve collective performance.
引用
收藏
页码:12620 / 12625
页数:6
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