Publications
Publication details [#48051]
Goldstone, Robert L. and Todd M. Gureckis. 2008. Thinking in groups. In Dror, Itiel E. and Steven Harnad, eds. Cognition Distributed. How cognitive technology extends our minds. (Benjamins Current Topics 16). John Benjamins. pp. 99–116.
Publication type
Article in book
Publication language
English
Keywords
Place, Publisher
John Benjamins
Annotation
Is cognition an exclusive property of the individual or can groups have a mind of their own? This question is explored from the perspective of complex adaptive systems. One of the principal insights from this line of work is that rules that govern behavior at one level of analysis (the individual) can cause qualitatively different behavior at higher levels (the group). A number of behavioral studies are reviewed that demonstrate how groups of people interacting in real-time can self-organize into adaptive, problem-solving group structures. A number of principles are derived concerning the critical features of such “distributed” information processing systems. It is suggested that while cognitive science has traditionally focused on the individual, cognitive processes may manifest at many levels including the emergent group-level behavior that results from the interaction of multiple agents and their environment.