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The Internet: The New Collective Human Intelligence?

The Internet: The New Collective Human Intelligence? | #eHealthPromotion, #SaluteSocial | Scoop.it
Is technology destroying our minds? We all have relatives who seems to believe this wholeheartedly. You can't really blame them for being skeptical with how much technology has changed in the last few decades. Our desktop computers went from a clunky tool that could be used for only a few programs with its single megabyte…

Via Klaus Meschede
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Essay of the Day: Collective Intelligence and Neutral Point of View in the Case of Wikipedia

An increasing number of organizations or communities today are harnessing the power of collective intelligence to tackle problems that are too big to be solved by themselves. While several prior studies have shown that collective intelligence can lead to high-quality output in the context of uncontroversial and verifiable information, it is unclear whether a production model based on collective intelligence will produce any desirable outcome when information is controversial, subjective, and unverifiable. 

Howard Rheingold's curator insight, November 17, 2013 2:24 PM

Augmented collective intelligence depends on technological amplification of the ability of humans to think, communicate, and work together -- and upon the norms, methods, and institutions that humans create to overcome social dilemmas. Wikipedia's Neutral Point of View is a perfect example of this kind of techno-social arrangement.

Paz Barceló's curator insight, November 18, 2013 6:18 AM

Sobre los límites de la inteligencia colectiva.

luiy's curator insight, November 18, 2013 9:06 AM

We examine whether collective intelligence helps achieve a neutral point of view (NPOV) using data from Wikipedia’s articles on US politics. Our null hypothesis builds on Linus’ Law, often expressed as “Given enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow.” Our findings are consistent with a narrow interpretation of Linus’ Law, namely, a greater number of contributors to an article makes an article more neutral. No evidence supports a broad interpretation of Linus’ Law. Moreover, several empirical facts suggest the law does not shape many articles. The majority of articles receive little attention, and most articles change only mildly from their initial slant. Our study provides the first empirical evidence on the limit of collective intelligence. While many managers believe that they could improve their products by taking advantage of the wisdom of crowds, we show that in the case of Wikipedia, there are aspects such as NPOV that collective intelligence does not help achieve successfully.

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l'intelligence collective et les compétences interculturelles

l'intelligence collective et les compétences interculturelles | #eHealthPromotion, #SaluteSocial | Scoop.it

Dans la présentation d'un colloque organisé par l'ANVIE ("Comment faire du management interculturel un atout compétitif ? La culture d’entreprise à l’épreuve de la mondialisation

Paris 26 Novembre 2015")  -


la réponse à la question:


Comment favoriser l’apprentissage des équipes multiculturelles et mettre en

place des communautés de pratiques efficaces ?


est donné de manière synthétique "A la clé : la stimulation de l’intelligence collective". 


Oui, mais comment faire ? Sans attendre la mise en ligne des premiers outils pensés par le Philosophe Pierre Levy, et notamment une implémentation sur l'internet de sa grammaire IEML "(IEML (pour Information Economy MetaLanguage) est une langue artificielle à la sémantique calculable qui n’impose aucune limite aux possibilités d’expression de nouveaux sens.)"

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