Group Judgments: Deliberation, Statistical Means, and Information Markets

Published: Jan 1, 2004
Abstract
How can groups elicit and aggregate the information held by their individual members? The most obvious answer involves deliberation. For two reasons, however, deliberating groups often fail to make good decisions. First, the statements and acts of some group members convey relevant information, and that information often leads other people not to disclose what they know. Second, social pressures, imposed by some group members, often lead other...
Paper Details
Title
Group Judgments: Deliberation, Statistical Means, and Information Markets
Published Date
Jan 1, 2004
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