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Measuring the effect of collective intelligence processes that leverage participation and deliberation

Measuring the effect of collective intelligence processes that leverage participation and deliberation
Measuring the effect of collective intelligence processes that leverage participation and deliberation
Given the gargantuan amount of scholarship on participation and deliberation, this chapter seeks to give an initial primer on what the authors consider the main topics present in the literature. For many years, the effects of collective participation and deliberation have been studied with very limited cross-fertilization among the fields concerned. However, empathy and interpersonal trust are also important preconditions of high-quality deliberation; thus, the authors can't discard the possibility that the current generation of studies is overstating these effects due to a reverse-causation bias. An interesting experiment from Druckman and Nelson explored the ability of deliberation to create 'antibodies' that could defend participants from framing effects. More generally, scholarship on the effects of deliberation and participation on creativity, critical thinking skills, and other cognitive capacities is not sufficiently integrated with the literature in psychology and pedagogy that have studied the development of such capacities in detail.
78-107
Routledge
Spada, Paolo
aa830424-63f7-4baa-aecc-0bba595b8221
Paulson, Lex
67efed49-50b8-4151-9e7b-7c4383f4ea30
Boucher, Stephen
Hallin, Carina Antonia
Paulson, Lex
Spada, Paolo
aa830424-63f7-4baa-aecc-0bba595b8221
Paulson, Lex
67efed49-50b8-4151-9e7b-7c4383f4ea30
Boucher, Stephen
Hallin, Carina Antonia
Paulson, Lex

Spada, Paolo and Paulson, Lex (2023) Measuring the effect of collective intelligence processes that leverage participation and deliberation. In, Boucher, Stephen, Hallin, Carina Antonia and Paulson, Lex (eds.) The Routledge Handbook of Collective Intelligence for Democracy and Governance. 1 ed. Routledge, pp. 78-107. (doi:10.4324/9781003215929).

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

Given the gargantuan amount of scholarship on participation and deliberation, this chapter seeks to give an initial primer on what the authors consider the main topics present in the literature. For many years, the effects of collective participation and deliberation have been studied with very limited cross-fertilization among the fields concerned. However, empathy and interpersonal trust are also important preconditions of high-quality deliberation; thus, the authors can't discard the possibility that the current generation of studies is overstating these effects due to a reverse-causation bias. An interesting experiment from Druckman and Nelson explored the ability of deliberation to create 'antibodies' that could defend participants from framing effects. More generally, scholarship on the effects of deliberation and participation on creativity, critical thinking skills, and other cognitive capacities is not sufficiently integrated with the literature in psychology and pedagogy that have studied the development of such capacities in detail.

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Published date: 19 June 2023

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Local EPrints ID: 502910
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502910
PURE UUID: a5c367cb-f2e2-43fa-9729-fda327afbbf7
ORCID for Paolo Spada: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7050-2079

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Date deposited: 11 Jul 2025 17:05
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:13

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Contributors

Author: Paolo Spada ORCID iD
Author: Lex Paulson
Editor: Stephen Boucher
Editor: Carina Antonia Hallin
Editor: Lex Paulson

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