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Collective intelligence ratio: Measurement of real‐time multimodal interactions in team projects

Paul Kim (Stanford University School of Education, Stanford, California, USA)
Donghwan Lee (Department of Statistics, Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea)
Youngjo Lee (Department of Statistics, Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea)
Chuan Huang (Stanford University School of Education, Stanford, California, USA)
Tamas Makany (Stanford University School of Education, Stanford, California, USA)

Team Performance Management

ISSN: 1352-7592

Article publication date: 8 March 2011

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Abstract

Purpose

With a team interaction analysis model, the authors sought to identify a varying range of individual and collective intellectual behaviors in a series of communicative intents particularly expressed with multimodal interaction methods. In this paper, the authors aim to present a new construct (i.e. collective intelligence ratio (CIR)) which refers to a numeric indicator representing the degree of intelligence of a team in which each team member demonstrates an individual intelligence ratio (IR) specific to a team goal.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors analyzed multimodal team interaction data linked to communicative intents with a Poisson‐hierarchical generalized linear model (HGLM).

Findings

The study found evidence of a distinctive IR for each team member in selecting a communicative method for a certain task, ultimately leading to varying degrees of team CIR.

Research limitations/implications

The authors limited the type and nature of human intelligence observed with a very short list of categories. Also, the data were evaluated by only one subject matter expert, leading to reliability issues. Therefore, generalization should be limited to situations in which teams, with pre‐specified team goals and tasks, are collaborating in multimodal interaction environments.

Practical implications

This study presents potential ways to directly or indirectly optimize team performance by identifying and incorporating IRs and CIRs in team composition strategies.

Originality/value

In the literature of team cognition and performance, the authors offer a new insight on team schema by suggesting a new task‐expertise‐person (TEP) unit integrating information on who uses what communicative methods to best tackle on what cognitive task (i.e. optimum cognition with least cognitive burden). Individual and collective intelligence ratios should be considered as new extensions to conventional transactive memory systems in multimodal team interaction scenarios.

Keywords

Citation

Kim, P., Lee, D., Lee, Y., Huang, C. and Makany, T. (2011), "Collective intelligence ratio: Measurement of real‐time multimodal interactions in team projects", Team Performance Management, Vol. 17 No. 1/2, pp. 41-62. https://doi.org/10.1108/13527591111114701

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2011, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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