AI Article Synopsis

  • This study addresses the complex question of whether a social group can effectively choose the best option when some members rely on what others say instead of evaluating choices independently.
  • The researchers created a mathematical model that combines various factors like the number of social learners, the merits of the options, and how people conform, to predict decision-making outcomes in a binary choice scenario.
  • The model suggests that when social learners make up a certain proportion of the group, a situation can arise where the majority may favor either the better or worse option, influenced by initial conditions and fluctuations, resolving existing debates about social influence on group decisions.

Article Abstract

A key question concerning collective decisions is whether a social system can settle on the best available option when some members learn from others instead of evaluating the options on their own. This question is challenging to study, and previous research has reached mixed conclusions, because collective decision outcomes depend on the insufficiently understood complex system of cognitive strategies, task properties, and social influence processes. This study integrates these complex interactions together in one general yet partially analytically tractable mathematical framework using a dynamical system model. In particular, it investigates how the interplay of the proportion of social learners, the relative merit of options, and the type of conformity response affect collective decision outcomes in a binary choice. The model predicts that, when the proportion of social learners exceeds a critical threshold, a bistable state appears in which the majority can end up favoring either the higher- or lower-merit option, depending on fluctuations and initial conditions. Below this threshold, the high-merit option is chosen by the majority. The critical threshold is determined by the conformity response function and the relative merits of the two options. The study helps reconcile disagreements about the effect of social learners on collective performance and proposes a mathematical framework that can be readily adapted to extensions investigating a wider variety of dynamics.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8536379PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2106292118DOI Listing

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