Adaptive group coordination and role differentiation.

Many real world situations (potluck dinners, academic departments, sports teams, corporate divisions, committees, seminar classes, etc.) involve actors adjusting their contributions in order to achieve a mutually satisfactory group goal, a win-win result. However, the majority of human group researc...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Michael E Roberts, Robert L Goldstone
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3139637?pdf=render
id doaj-803fd37403c944f5b01dcc72c1526623
record_format Article
spelling doaj-803fd37403c944f5b01dcc72c15266232020-11-24T22:04:59ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0167e2237710.1371/journal.pone.0022377Adaptive group coordination and role differentiation.Michael E RobertsRobert L GoldstoneMany real world situations (potluck dinners, academic departments, sports teams, corporate divisions, committees, seminar classes, etc.) involve actors adjusting their contributions in order to achieve a mutually satisfactory group goal, a win-win result. However, the majority of human group research has involved situations where groups perform poorly because task constraints promote either individual maximization behavior or diffusion of responsibility, and even successful tasks generally involve the propagation of one correct solution through a group. Here we introduce a group task that requires complementary actions among participants in order to reach a shared goal. Without communication, group members submit numbers in an attempt to collectively sum to a randomly selected target number. After receiving group feedback, members adjust their submitted numbers until the target number is reached. For all groups, performance improves with task experience, and group reactivity decreases over rounds. Our empirical results provide evidence for adaptive coordination in human groups, and as the coordination costs increase with group size, large groups adapt through spontaneous role differentiation and self-consistency among members. We suggest several agent-based models with different rules for agent reactions, and we show that the empirical results are best fit by a flexible, adaptive agent strategy in which agents decrease their reactions when the group feedback changes. The task offers a simple experimental platform for studying the general problem of group coordination while maximizing group returns, and we distinguish the task from several games in behavioral game theory.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3139637?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael E Roberts
Robert L Goldstone
spellingShingle Michael E Roberts
Robert L Goldstone
Adaptive group coordination and role differentiation.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Michael E Roberts
Robert L Goldstone
author_sort Michael E Roberts
title Adaptive group coordination and role differentiation.
title_short Adaptive group coordination and role differentiation.
title_full Adaptive group coordination and role differentiation.
title_fullStr Adaptive group coordination and role differentiation.
title_full_unstemmed Adaptive group coordination and role differentiation.
title_sort adaptive group coordination and role differentiation.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Many real world situations (potluck dinners, academic departments, sports teams, corporate divisions, committees, seminar classes, etc.) involve actors adjusting their contributions in order to achieve a mutually satisfactory group goal, a win-win result. However, the majority of human group research has involved situations where groups perform poorly because task constraints promote either individual maximization behavior or diffusion of responsibility, and even successful tasks generally involve the propagation of one correct solution through a group. Here we introduce a group task that requires complementary actions among participants in order to reach a shared goal. Without communication, group members submit numbers in an attempt to collectively sum to a randomly selected target number. After receiving group feedback, members adjust their submitted numbers until the target number is reached. For all groups, performance improves with task experience, and group reactivity decreases over rounds. Our empirical results provide evidence for adaptive coordination in human groups, and as the coordination costs increase with group size, large groups adapt through spontaneous role differentiation and self-consistency among members. We suggest several agent-based models with different rules for agent reactions, and we show that the empirical results are best fit by a flexible, adaptive agent strategy in which agents decrease their reactions when the group feedback changes. The task offers a simple experimental platform for studying the general problem of group coordination while maximizing group returns, and we distinguish the task from several games in behavioral game theory.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3139637?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT michaeleroberts adaptivegroupcoordinationandroledifferentiation
AT robertlgoldstone adaptivegroupcoordinationandroledifferentiation
_version_ 1725827893096873984