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Decision Making in Groups

Decision Making in Groups. Outline. Why make decisions in groups? Activity Information sharing in groups Activity Group polarization. Why Make Decisions in Groups?. 1) More knowledge, more ideas, better memories 2) Evaluate opinions better, catch errors.

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Decision Making in Groups

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  1. Decision Making in Groups

  2. Outline • Why make decisions in groups? • Activity • Information sharing in groups • Activity • Group polarization

  3. Why Make Decisions in Groups? • 1) More knowledge, more ideas, better memories • 2) Evaluate opinions better, catch errors. • 3) Have standards for making decisions • Social decision schemes: • The process by which individual inputs are combined to yield a group decision • 4) Can hide from individual responsibility

  4. Group Decision Making Exercise • Group Decision Making Activity • Crime on Sesame Street • Who dunnit?

  5. Exercise Instructions • Instructions • INDIVIDUALLY read through the scenario and all of the evidence • INDIVIDUALLY make your decision as to who committed the crime • As a GROUP discuss the case and unanimously agree on who committed the crime

  6. Are Group Decisions Always Good? • Of course not. • Why do groups sometimes fail?

  7. Information Sharing Problems in Groups • Fail to pool unshared information effectively • Tendency to oversample shared information • This tendency is exacerbated in tasks without ‘correct’ decisions • Leaders can prompt members to revealed unshared information

  8. INDIVIDUALLY, read the scenarios and check the solution you favor. As a GROUP, discuss the scenarios and reach an unanimous opinion on each of them. Group Decision Making Exercise

  9. Examine your scores: 1. Calculate your score prior to the discussion by summing your odds and dividing by 3. 2. Calculate your group’s prediscussion average score. 3. Compute your group’s postdiscussion score. 4. Draw a diagram of your group indicating the location of each person, the group’s prediscussion score, and the discussion score along a continuum from risk to caution. Group Decision Making Exercise

  10. Groups: Moderating or Polarizing? • Common belief: • Groups exert a moderating effect on their members • Groups more moderate decision makers than individuals • But then… • In the early 1960s researchers questioned this assumption

  11. Risky Shift Research • Choice Dilemmas Questionnaire (CDQ) • 12 life-situation problems involving a central person with a choice between more or less risky courses of action. • The participant's task is to choose the lowest likelihood of success he or she would demand before recommending the risky alternative. • SS complete the CDQ alone, after discussing it with a group, and again alone

  12. Risky Shift Research • Comparing individual responses to group responses: • SS generally advocated riskier decisions in groups! • This change carried over to later individual choices • This is the RISKY SHIFT

  13. Risky Shift Research • Researchers found risky shifts on many attitudes, beliefs, values, judgements and perceptions. • Some researchers found a different kind of shift: • Shift toward caution • Risky shift is part of a larger process!

  14. Group Polarization • Discussion leads to group polarization: • Judgments made after group discussion will be more extreme in the same direction as the average of individual judgments prior to discussion. • The direction of the polarization depends on the group members’ original viewpoints. • Thus, before we can predict how the discussion will polarize the group, we must know the initial opinions of the members.

  15. Group Polarization Risky Shift Cautious Shift 1 5 9 Caution Risk 7 3 C & D A B E F

  16. Why? • Why do we shift our judgments to match the position that our group initially values? • Two theoretical explanations: • Persuasive arguments theory • Social comparison theory

  17. Persuasive Arguments Theory • After discussion, we can generate more arguments favoring the more valued alternative. • With the CDQ, arguments favoring risk rather than caution are more plentiful.

  18. Social Comparison Theory • During group discussion people actively compare themselves with others • When they discover that some members of the group have stronger attitudes than they do, they begin endorsing more extreme positions.

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