| Literature DB >> 25775532 |
Ali Mahmoodi1, Dan Bang2, Karsten Olsen3, Yuanyuan Aimee Zhao4, Zhenhao Shi5, Kristina Broberg6, Shervin Safavi7, Shihui Han4, Majid Nili Ahmadabadi1, Chris D Frith8, Andreas Roepstorff3, Geraint Rees9, Bahador Bahrami10.
Abstract
We tend to think that everyone deserves an equal say in a debate. This seemingly innocuous assumption can be damaging when we make decisions together as part of a group. To make optimal decisions, group members should weight their differing opinions according to how competent they are relative to one another; whenever they differ in competence, an equal weighting is suboptimal. Here, we asked how people deal with individual differences in competence in the context of a collective perceptual decision-making task. We developed a metric for estimating how participants weight their partner's opinion relative to their own and compared this weighting to an optimal benchmark. Replicated across three countries (Denmark, Iran, and China), we show that participants assigned nearly equal weights to each other's opinions regardless of true differences in their competence-even when informed by explicit feedback about their competence gap or under monetary incentives to maximize collective accuracy. This equality bias, whereby people behave as if they are as good or as bad as their partner, is particularly costly for a group when a competence gap separates its members.Entities:
Keywords: bias; equality; joint decision-making; social cognition
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25775532 PMCID: PMC4378431 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1421692112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205