The wisdom of polarized crowds
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https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-019-0541-6Metadata
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Shi, Bill, Mikhail Teplitskiy, Eamon Duede, James Evans. "The wisdom of polarized crowds." No Journal 3;4 (2019): 329-336. DOI: 10.1038/s41562-019-0541-6Abstract
As political polarization in the United States continues to rise 1–3, the question of whetherpolarized individuals can fruitfully cooperate becomes pressing. Although diverse perspectives
typically lead to superior team performance on complex tasks 4, 5, strong political perspectives
have been associated with conflict, misinformation and a reluctance to engage with
people and ideas beyond one’s echo chamber 6–8. Here, we explore the effect of ideological
composition on team performance through analyzing millions of edits to Wikipedia’s Political,
Social Issues, and Science articles. We measure editors’ online ideological preferences
1
by how much they contribute to conservative versus liberal articles. Editor surveys suggest
that online contributions associate with offline (a) political party affiliation and (b) ideological
self-identity. Our analysis reveals that polarized teams consisting of a balanced set of ideologically
diverse editors produce articles of higher quality than homogeneous teams. The effect
appears most strongly in Wikipedia’s Political articles, but also in Social Issues and even
Science articles. Analysis of article “talk pages” reveals that ideologically polarized teams
engage in longer, more constructive, competitive, and substantively focused but linguistically
diverse debates than ideological moderates. More intense use of Wikipedia policies by ideologically
diverse teams suggests institutional design principles to help unleash the power of
polarization.
Citable link to this page
https://nrs.harvard.edu/URN-3:HUL.INSTREPOS:37374257
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