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Human Collective Intelligence under Dual Exploration-Exploitation Dilemmas

Overview of attention for article published in PLOS ONE, April 2014
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Title
Human Collective Intelligence under Dual Exploration-Exploitation Dilemmas
Published in
PLOS ONE, April 2014
DOI 10.1371/journal.pone.0095789
Pubmed ID
Authors

Wataru Toyokawa, Hye-rin Kim, Tatsuya Kameda

Abstract

The exploration-exploitation dilemma is a recurrent adaptive problem for humans as well as non-human animals. Given a fixed time/energy budget, every individual faces a fundamental trade-off between exploring for better resources and exploiting known resources to optimize overall performance under uncertainty. Colonies of eusocial insects are known to solve this dilemma successfully via evolved coordination mechanisms that function at the collective level. For humans and other non-eusocial species, however, this dilemma operates within individuals as well as between individuals, because group members may be motivated to take excessive advantage of others' exploratory findings through social learning. Thus, even though social learning can reduce collective exploration costs, the emergence of disproportionate "information scroungers" may severely undermine its potential benefits. We investigated experimentally whether social learning opportunities might improve the performance of human participants working on a "multi-armed bandit" problem in groups, where they could learn about each other's past choice behaviors. Results showed that, even though information scroungers emerged frequently in groups, social learning opportunities reduced total group exploration time while increasing harvesting from better options, and consequentially improved collective performance. Surprisingly, enriching social information by allowing participants to observe others' evaluations of chosen options (e.g., Amazon's 5-star rating system) in addition to choice-frequency information had a detrimental impact on performance compared to the simpler situation with only the choice-frequency information. These results indicate that humans groups can handle the fundamental "dual exploration-exploitation dilemmas" successfully, and that social learning about simple choice-frequencies can help produce collective intelligence.

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Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
United Kingdom 2 2%
United States 2 2%
Luxembourg 1 <1%
Australia 1 <1%
Unknown 114 95%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Student > Ph. D. Student 31 26%
Researcher 20 17%
Student > Master 15 13%
Student > Bachelor 11 9%
Student > Doctoral Student 8 7%
Other 20 17%
Unknown 15 13%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Psychology 27 23%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 16 13%
Computer Science 13 11%
Social Sciences 6 5%
Business, Management and Accounting 6 5%
Other 30 25%
Unknown 22 18%