An emergentist account of collective cognition in collaborative problem solving
Voiklis
John K.
author
Teachers College. Human Development
Kapur
Manu
author
Teachers College. Mathematics, Science, and Technology
Kinzer
Charles
author
Teachers College. Mathematics, Science, and Technology
Black
John B.
author
Teachers College. Human Development
Teachers College. Human Development
originator
text
Articles
2006
English
As a first step toward an emergentist theory of collective cognition in collaborative problem solving, we present a proto-theoretical account of how one might conceive and model the intersubjective processes that organize collective cognition into one or another—convergent, divergent, or tensive—cognitive regime. To explore the sufficiency of our emergentist proposal we instantiate a minimalist model of intersubjective convergence and simulate the tuning of collective cognition using data from an empirical study of small-group, collaborative problem solving. Using the results of this empirical simulation, we test a number of preliminary hypotheses with regard to patterns of interaction, how those patterns affect a cognitive regime, and how that cognitive regime affects the efficacy of a problem-solving group.
Cognitive psychology
Proceedings of the CogSci 2006, 28th annual conference of the Cognitive Science Society in cooperation with the 5th International Conference of the Cognitive Science : July 26 - 29, 2006, Vancouver, B.C., Canada
Mahwah, N.J.
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates
2006
858
863
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:29809
NNC
NNC
2011-03-31 13:29:15 -0400
2011-11-10 12:54:42 -0500
3536
eng