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- Boris Maciejovsky and David V Budescu.
- Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA. maciejov@mit.edu
- J Pers Soc Psychol. 2007 May 1;92(5):854-70.
AbstractThere is strong evidence that groups perform better than individuals do on intellective tasks with demonstrably correct solutions. Typically, these studies assume that group members share common goals. The authors extend this line of research by replacing standard face-to-face group interactions with competitive auctions, allowing for conflicting individual incentives. In a series of studies involving the well-known Wason selection task, they demonstrate that competitive auctions induce learning effects equally impressive as those of standard group interactions, and they uncover specific and general knowledge transfers from these institutions to new reasoning problems. The authors identify payoff feedback and information pooling as the driving factors underlying these findings, and they explain these factors within the theoretical framework of collective induction.((c) 2007 APA, all rights reserved).
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