Collective Problem Solving
Collective problem solving
Problem
solving is applied on many different levels − from the individual to the
civilizational. Collective problem solving refers to problem solving performed
collectively.
Social issues and global
issues can typically only be solved collectively.
It has
been noted that the complexity of contemporary problems has exceeded the
cognitive capacity of any individual and requires different but complementary
expertise and collective problem solving ability.
Collective intelligence is shared or group intelligence
that emerges from the collaboration,
collective efforts, and competition of many individuals.
In a 1962
research report, Douglas
Engelbart linked collective intelligence to organizational
effectiveness, and predicted that pro-actively 'augmenting human intellect'
would yield a multiplier effect in group problem solving: "Three people
working together in this augmented mode [would] seem to be more than three
times as effective in solving a complex problem as is one augmented person
working alone".
Henry Jenkins, a key theorist of new media and media convergence
draws on the theory that collective intelligence can be attributed to media
convergence and participatory culture. He criticizes contemporary education for
failing to incorporate online trends of collective problem solving into the
classroom, stating "whereas a collective intelligence community encourages
ownership of work as a group, schools grade individuals". Jenkins argues
that interaction within a knowledge community builds vital skills for young
people, and teamwork through collective intelligence communities contributes to
the development of such skills.
Collective impact is the commitment of a group of actors from
different sectors to a common agenda for solving a specific social problem,
using a structured form of collaboration.
After World War II the UN, the Bretton Woods organization and
the WTO were created;
collective problem solving on the international level crystallized around these
three types of organizations from the 1980s onward. As these global
institutions remain state-like or state-centric it has been called unsurprising
that these continue state-like or state-centric approaches to collective
problem-solving rather than alternative ones.
Crowdsourcing is a process of accumulating the ideas, thoughts
or information from many independent participants, with aim to find the best
solution for a given challenge. Modern information technologies allow for massive number of subjects to
be involved as well as systems of managing these suggestions that provide good
results. With the Internet a
new capacity for collective, including planetary-scale, problem solving was
created.
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