| last updated 
      11/11/2014 
		The Surprising Failures of Deliberative 
		GroupsSunstein' Infotopia.  pp. 45-73
 
		Thesis/ Themes 
			
			While 
			we, as citizens, assume decision-making by deliberating groups (i.e. 
			groups that meet and discuss face-to-face) is good and effective, 
			such groups can go very wrong. 
				
				
				While majority opinion tends to rule in deliberative settings, the "truth" influences 
				decisions - but only somewhat
				
				Groups sometimes make good decisions (esp. if the majority 
				starts out favoring the good decision) but often they don't.
				
				Groups can end up making worse decisions than any individual 
				would have made.  Consider situations as diverse as the Bay 
				of Pigs fiasco, student group hazing incidents, the GM ignition 
				switch recall.
				
				Groups work best at getting the "right" answer if the right 
				answer is obvious when you see it (due to the effects of the 
				Condorcet Jury Theorem).
				
				Deliberating groups vary a lot in effectiveness (see above 
				points); thus, group deliberation is not always a good idea.
				
				Sunstein assumes (mostly correctly) that an essential to making 
				good decisions is being careful to pool the best information 
				available. 
		Key Concepts 
			
			In 
			groups where there is substantial initial agreement (e.g. mostly 
			liberals or conservatives), views become more extreme as a result of 
			discussion.  (this is called "risky shift.")
			
			Groupthink, based on the research of Irving Janis into the 
			causes of the Cuban Bay of Pigs Invasion fiasco, illustrates how, in 
			highly cohesive grooups, social pressure and witholding information 
			can cause disasterous mistakes.
			
			Sunstein tends to presume that the principle function of 
			deliberation is to combine information and expand the range of 
			thinking.  His take on the U.S. Constitution is that pooling 
			information is what the structures of government are intended to do.  
			But there may be more to it.  (What?)
			A 
			highly confident group member may lead the group in his/her 
			direction, for better or worse (e.g. 12 Angry Men).
			
			Sunstein suggests small group outcomes tell us about larger groups, 
			but is that true?
			Herb 
			Simon's concept of "satisficing" [The tendency of 
			individuals and groups to gain just enough 
			information to develop a preference for a decision, often ends the 
			search for information and leads to efforts to avoid contradictory 
			information].  This is at least partially a feature of the human 
			desire to reduce ambiguity - whether by individuals or in groups.  
			This problem is amplified by the desire to be "effcient."
			SHARED 
			knowleged plays a much bigger role in decision-making than UNSHARED 
			knowledge even when the unshared knowledge is better.  Groups 
			are less likely to ignore unshared knowledge when they believe there 
			is a demonstrably correct answer to the problem they are facing.
			The 
			two most important reasons for deliberative failure  
			(Low status members are most affected by these.) 
			
			
			Informational influences -- people defer to others (and don't 
			share their information) when they have the impression others are 
			right/more confident.  (informational signals)
			
			Social influences -- people defer to the group/others when they 
			fear their statements will be punished, ridiculed or disliked.
			Groups 
			function better and share information better when the benefits of 
			good decision-making result in meaningful, real rewards for the 
			individual members.   |