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  1.  25
    The Impact of Cognitive Style Diversity on Implicit Learning in Teams.Ishani Aggarwal, Anita Williams Woolley, Christopher F. Chabris & Thomas W. Malone - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10:428707.
    Organizations are increasingly looking for ways to reap the benefits of cognitive diversity for problem solving. A major unanswered question concerns the implications of cognitive diversity for longer-term outcomes such as team learning, with its broader effects on organizational learning and productivity. We study how cognitive style diversity in teams—or diversity in the way that team members encode, organize and process information—indirectly influences team learning through collective intelligence, or the general ability of a team to work together across a wide (...)
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  2.  14
    COHUMAIN: Building the Socio‐Cognitive Architecture of Collective Human–Machine Intelligence.Cleotilde Gonzalez, Henny Admoni, Scott Brown & Anita Williams Woolley - forthcoming - Topics in Cognitive Science.
    In recent years, we have experienced rapid development of advanced technology, machine learning, and artificial intelligence (AI), intended to interact with and augment the abilities of humans in practically every area of life. With the rapid growth of new capabilities, such as those enabled by generative AI (e.g., ChatGPT), AI is increasingly at the center of human communication and collaboration, resulting in a growing recognition of the need to understand how humans and AI can integrate their inputs in collaborative teams. (...)
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  3.  10
    Fostering Collective Intelligence in Human–AI Collaboration: Laying the Groundwork for COHUMAIN.Pranav Gupta, Thuy Ngoc Nguyen, Cleotilde Gonzalez & Anita Williams Woolley - forthcoming - Topics in Cognitive Science.
    Artificial Intelligence (AI) powered machines are increasingly mediating our work and many of our managerial, economic, and cultural interactions. While technology enhances individual capability in many ways, how do we know that the sociotechnical system as a whole, consisting of a complex web of hundreds of human–machine interactions, is exhibiting collective intelligence? Research on human–machine interactions has been conducted within different disciplinary silos, resulting in social science models that underestimate technology and vice versa. Bringing together these different perspectives and methods (...)
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    Diversity of contributions is not efficient but is essential for science.Catherine T. Shea & Anita Williams Woolley - 2024 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 47:e57.
    Dominant paradigms in science foster integration of research findings, but at what cost? Forcing convergence requires centralizing decision-making authority, and risks reducing the diversity of methods and contributors, both of which are essential for the breakthrough ideas that advance science.
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