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contributor authorGecer Ulu, Nurcan
contributor authorMessersmith, Michael
contributor authorGoucher-Lambert, Kosa
contributor authorCagan, Jonathan
contributor authorKara, Levent Burak
date accessioned2019-09-18T09:05:49Z
date available2019-09-18T09:05:49Z
date copyright4/16/2019 12:00:00 AM
date issued2019
identifier issn1050-0472
identifier othermd_141_8_081102
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4258810
description abstractA multitude of studies in economics, psychology, political and social sciences have demonstrated the wisdom of crowds (WoC) phenomenon, where the collective estimate of a group can be more accurate than estimates of individuals. While WoC is observable in such domains where the participating individuals have experience or familiarity with the question at hand, it remains unclear how effective WoC is for domains that traditionally require deep expertise or sophisticated computational models to estimate objective answers. This work explores how effective WoC is for engineering design problems that are esoteric in nature, that is, problems (1) whose solutions traditionally require expertise and specialized knowledge, (2) where access to experts can be costly or infeasible, and (3) in which previous WoC studies with the general population have been shown to be highly ineffective. The main hypothesis in this work is that in the absence of experts, WoC can be observed in groups that consist of practitioners who are defined to have a base familiarity with the problems in question but not necessarily domain experts. As a way to emulate commonly encountered engineering problem-solving scenarios, this work studies WoC with practitioners that form microcrowds consisting of 5–15 individuals, thereby giving rise to the term the wisdom of microcrowds (WoMC). Our studies on design evaluations show that WoMC produces results whose mean is in the 80th percentile or better across varying crowd sizes, even for problems that are highly nonintuitive in nature.
publisherAmerican Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleWisdom of Microcrowds in Evaluating Solutions to Esoteric Engineering Problems
typeJournal Paper
journal volume141
journal issue8
journal titleJournal of Mechanical Design
identifier doi10.1115/1.4042615
journal fristpage81102
journal lastpage081102-10
treeJournal of Mechanical Design:;2019:;volume( 141 ):;issue: 008
contenttypeFulltext


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