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How Collaboration can Affect the Quality of Judgment

by Savitha C Muppala on Mar 9 2012 5:18 PM

 How Collaboration can Affect the Quality of Judgment
Collaboration could result in overconfidence which may affect the quality of judgment, researchers have revealed.
From the corporate boardroom to the kitchen table, important decisions are often made in collaboration.

But two-or three or five-heads are not always better than one, according to new research from the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School.

"People who make judgments by working with someone else are more confident in those judgments. As a result they take less input from other people"-and this myopia wipes out any advantage a pair may have over an individual, says psychologist Julia A. Minson, who conducted the study with Jennifer S. Mueller.

"The collaborative process itself is the problem," she stated.

To test the hypothesis that confidence born of collaboration takes a toll on the quality of judgment, Minson and Mueller asked 252 people to estimate nine quantities related to U.S. geography, demographics, and commerce, either individually or in pairs after discussion.

They were then offered the estimates of other individuals and pairs and allowed to revise their own; the final estimates therefore could come from the efforts of two to four people.

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To sweeten the pot, participants earned a 30-dollar bonus for each of two estimation rounds, but lost 1 dollar for each percentage point their answer deviated from correct. Individuals also rated their confidence in their judgments.

They found that people working with a partner were more confident in their estimates and significantly less willing to take outside advice.

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The pairs' guesses were marginally more accurate than those of the individuals at first. But after revision (or lack thereof), that difference was gone.

Even the combined judgments of four people yielded no better results than those of two or three. Finally, the researchers found that had the pairs yielded to outside input, their estimates would have been significantly more accurate. Their confidence was costly.

So should we toss out teamwork? No, says Minson, but since collaboration is expensive and time consuming, managers should use it efficiently. For one thing, a group of 10 is not 10 times better.

"Mathematically, you get the biggest bang from the buck going from one decision-maker to two. For each additional person, that benefit drops off in a downward sloping curve," Minson stated.

Most important is awareness of the costs of teamwork.

"If people become aware that collaboration leads to an increase in overconfidence, you can set up ways to mitigate it. Teams could be urged to consider and process each others' inputs more thoroughly," she explained.

The same goes for a couple choosing a mortgage or a car, according to Minson.

"Just because you make a decision with someone else and you feel good about it, don't be so sure that you've solved the problem and you don't need help from anybody else," she noted.

The findings appear in the journal Psychological Science, published by the Association for Psychological Science.

Source-ANI


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