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  • Cited by 2
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
February 2022
Print publication year:
2022
Online ISBN:
9781108981361
Creative Commons:
Creative Common License - CC Creative Common License - BY Creative Common License - NC Creative Common License - ND
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/creativelicenses

Book description

In the era of digital communication, collective problem solving is increasingly important. Large groups can now resolve issues together in completely different ways, which has transformed the arts, sciences, business, education, technology, and medicine. Collective intelligence is something we share with animals and is different from machine learning and artificial intelligence. To design and utilize human collective intelligence, we must understand how its problem-solving mechanisms work. From democracy in ancient Athens, through the invention of the printing press, to COVID-19, this book analyzes how humans developed the ability to find solutions together. This wide-ranging, thought-provoking book is a game-changer for those working strategically with collective problem solving within organizations and using a variety of innovative methods. It sheds light on how humans work effectively alongside machines to confront challenges that are more urgent than what humanity has faced before. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

Reviews

‘Rolf Baltzersen has written the best book to date on collective intelligence in relation to innovation processes and cultural evolution. It is both a precise and informative manual and a very inspiring manifesto.’

Pierre A. Lévy - Professor of Communication, University of Ottawa, Canada

‘The book introduces you to the extraordinary Collective intelligence (CI) world and signposts different perspectives on CI. It explores common practices and characterizations of the phenomenon and then tackles context-based problem solving. It also discusses how CI can be successful in scientific and political domains. This book is a helpful reference for scholars and business professionals alike.’

Jaime Meza - Doctor in Project and Systems Engineering, Technical University of Manabi, Ecuador

‘This is an excellent survey of the state of knowledge about collective intelligence, which shows its relevance to a huge range of issues, from COVID-19 to citizen science and the future of democracy. The book also contains wonderfully rich examples of collective intelligence in history, from ancient Athens to the renaissance, showing the fertility of innovation around organising thought and decision-making at large scale. I strongly recommend it.’

Geoff Mulgan - Professor of Collective Intelligence, Public Policy and Social Innovation, University College London, UK

‘Rolf Baltzersen provides a compelling overview of collective intelligence, organizing cutting-edge research from a variety of disciplines within cultural-historical contexts. His distinction between swarm, stigmergic, and collaborative problem solving, which applies to human and nonhuman collectives alike, produces novel insights and makes an important contribution to the lexicon.’

Scott Page - John Seely Brown Distinguished University Professor of Complexity, Social Science, and Management, University of Michigan, USA

‘In the era of digital communication, collective problem solving is increasingly important. Large groups can now resolve issues together in completely different ways, which has transformed the arts, sciences, business, education, technology, and medicine. Collective intelligence is something we share with animals and is different from machine learning and artificial intelligence. To design and utilize human collective intelligence, we must understand how its problem-solving mechanisms work. From democracy in ancient Athens, through the invention of the printing press, to COVID-19, this book analyzes how humans developed the ability to find solutions together. This wide-ranging, thought-provoking book is a game-changer for those working strategically with collective problem solving within organizations and using a variety of innovative methods. It sheds light on how humans work effectively alongside machines to confront the most urgent challenges ever faced by humanity. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.’

Rolf K. Baltzersen - Professor in the Faculty of Education at Østfold University College, Norway

'… this book will be welcomed by scholars of contemporary virtual experience … Recommended.'

K. D. Winward Source: Choice

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Contents

Full book PDF
  • Cultural-Historical Perspectives on Collective Intelligence
    pp i-i
  • Current Perspectives in Social and Behavioral Sciences - Series page
    pp ii-ii
  • Copyright page
    pp iv-iv
  • Dedication
    pp v-vi
  • Contents
    pp vii-xii
  • Figures
    pp xiii-xvii
  • Tables
    pp xviii-xviii
  • Chapter 1 - What Is Collective Intelligence?
    pp 1-26
  • Chapter 2 - Crowdsourcing
    pp 27-49
  • Chapter 3 - Open Online Knowledge Sharing
    pp 50-74
  • Chapter 4 - Human Swarm Problem Solving
    pp 75-134
  • Chapter 5 - The Origins of Human Swarm Problem Solving
    pp 135-170
  • Chapter 6 - Human Stigmergic Problem Solving
    pp 171-207
  • Chapter 7 - The Origins of Human Stigmergic Problem Solving
    pp 208-237
  • Chapter 8 - Collaborative Problem Solving
    pp 238-253
  • Chapter 9 - The Origins of Collaborative Problem Solving
    pp 254-275
  • Chapter 10 - Intelligent Engagement
    pp 276-312
  • Chapter 11 - Intelligent Contributions
    pp 313-339
  • Chapter 12 - Intelligent Evaluations
    pp 340-365
  • Chapter 13 - COVID-19 as a Wicked Problem
    pp 366-380
  • Chapter 14 - Motivation to Contribute
    pp 381-398
  • Chapter 15 - The Intelligent Society
    pp 399-418
  • References
    pp 419-441
  • Index
    pp 442-448

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