A) Similarity, Conformity, Centralization, and Division. B) Diversity, Independence, Decentralization, and Aggregation. C) Education, Wealth, Cooperation, and Technology. D) Unity, Leadership, Consensus, and Speed.
A) The crowd predicting the winner of a presidential election. B) The crowd solving a complex math problem. C) The crowd correctly diagnosing a rare disease. D) The crowd's accurate guess of an ox's weight at a county fair.
A) A system for efficiently sharing data within a large organization. B) A rapid succession of new information being discovered. C) The process of aggregating individual opinions into a group decision. D) People abandoning their own knowledge to follow the actions of others.
A) It makes it easier to reach a quick consensus. B) It reduces the amount of conflict during discussions. C) It ensures that all members have similar educational backgrounds. D) It brings different information and perspectives to the problem.
A) Everyone in the crowd must work alone without any communication. B) The group must be free from any external influence or rules. C) Each person must have a unique and specialized skill set. D) People's opinions are not determined by the opinions of others.
A) The act of summarizing a long report into key points. B) The process of collecting large amounts of data. C) A method for resolving disagreements within a group. D) A mechanism for turning private judgments into a collective decision.
A) How groups select the most attractive leader. B) The competitive dynamics of reality television shows. C) How people make decisions based on what they think others will think. D) The subjective nature of judging art and aesthetics.
A) A coordination problem. B) A cooperation problem. C) A communication problem. D) A cognition problem.
A) It prevents any single person from becoming too powerful. B) It reduces the costs associated with management and oversight. C) It ensures that all decisions are made democratically. D) It allows people to draw on local and specific knowledge. |