Evidence for a Collective Intelligence Factor in the Performance of Human Groups
The team performance is
Not much correlation
Average individual intelligence
The intelligence of the smartest person
Correlate.
social signal Sensitivity
Equality in switching statements
Percentage of women
Evidence for a Collective Intelligence Factor in the Performance of Human Groups | Science
Psychologists have repeatedly shown that a single statistical factor—often called “general intelligence”—emerges from the correlations among people’s performance on a wide variety of cognitive tasks. But no one has systematically examined whether a similar kind of “collective intelligence” exists for groups of people. In two studies with 699 people, working in groups of two to five, we find converging evidence of a general collective intelligence factor that explains a group’s performance on a wide variety of tasks. This “c factor” is not strongly correlated with the average or maximum individual intelligence of group members but is correlated with the average social sensitivity of group members, the equality in distribution of conversational turn-taking, and the proportion of females in the group.
Collective Intelligence
Balance in the amount of statements
teamwork
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