| last updated 
      12/5/2013 
		Problems of Deliberative 
		Groupsbased on Cass
		Sunstein' Infotopia.  pp. 75-102
 
		Thesis/ Themes 
		Key Concepts 
			
			
			Poor Information Base Problems: 
			AMPLIFICATION Errors:  For the reasons indicated below, the 
			original or prevailing view/information in a deliberating group 
			prior to discussion is likely to be amplified and held 
			more intensely because it will be reinforced during discussion.  
			This is true even when the totality of the group's information 
			(including information held solely by single individuals) shows the 
			original view is likely wrong. 
				
				
				Heuristics - mental shorthands to reasoning and deciding.  
				These errors in using information lead to an inadequate 
				information base, a poor understanding of the facts upon which 
				decisions are based. 
					
					
					Availability - information that is familiar or highly 
					salient is weighed more heavily in decision-making than less 
					available information (which can easily be ignored even when 
					it is more important and useful - e.g. the "shared 
					knowledge" effect).
					
					Representativeness - people tend to make judgements 
					about unknown people or events by assuming they are similar 
					(representative) of something that we do know that is 
					similar in some way.
					
					and a variety of others.
				
				Informational preference influences -- Information/knowledge shared 
				by many in the group is valued more than individually held 
				information/knowledge ("HIDDEN 
				PROFILES") 
					
					
					shared information is comes up in discussion more often.
					
					shared information results in members having a more positive 
					view of the source who brings it up (a reward).
					
					hearing information discussed that one shares with others 
					causes us to have a more positive view of ourselves 
					(rewarding).
				
				FRAMING - Groups can develop or share a common contextual 
				understanding of what is important or how a decision should be 
				made (i.e. a frame) that leads to a single view point that may be wrong. 
				
			
			Social influences -- People wish not to stand out as 
				different (risky to image) 
				
				Thus, little new information that is individually held is 
					given. People defer to the group/others when they 
			fear their statements will be punished, ridiculed or disliked.  
					[See CASCADES below]
				
				Cognitively central people (the ones who share the 
					most information with others in the group/ are most 
					connected and communicative) have higher credibility 
					than cognitively peripheral individuals who possess 
					information different from most or all others (and perhaps 
					information more useful to the group).  Thus, 
					cognitively central people will be more influential to the 
					exclusion of individually held information by others.
				
				 Groups 
			function better and share information better when the benefits of 
			good decision-making result in meaningful, real rewards for the 
			individual members.
			
			POLARIZATION - "Deliberating groups typically end up in a more 
			extreme position in line with their tendencies before deliberation 
			began." (p. 92)  this occurs for the reasons above and due 
			to pressures toward conformity and due to confidence gained by 
			seeing others agree with prexisting views.
 
				
				"Groups 
				are more likely than individuals to escalate their commitment to 
				a course of action that is failing -- and all the more so if 
				members identify strongly with the groups of which they are a 
				part." [i.e. potentially due to risky shift.  
				this is also called "escalation of committment" or 
				"doubling down"] (p. 79)  This sort of escalation 
				of committment occurs in part, because individuals and then the 
				group gains confidence from hearing others agree with them. 
				CASCADES 
					
					Informational cascades - information is repeated (perhaps because it 
			is shared) by several members and then others.  Then, even those with 
					different or conflicting 
			information, go along.  Often members supress/ignore the differing viewpoint they 
			hold in order to conform.
					
					Reputational cascades - individuals who hear many others holding 
			views different than their own will withold their views to protect 
			their reputations.   |