How do collectives make decisions?
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- Young Academy
- Research projects
- How do collectives make decisions?
Originally, the term“collective”referstoa social structure of living organisms. However, the term is also used in scientific fields to describe properties of matter not limited to living organisms, such as living cells or quantum materials. A frequently encountered term is “swarm intelligence,” which is used across a wide range of disciplines. A cross-disciplinary question here is the emergence of decision-making processes within collectives. This is a topic that has traditionally been addressed separately within the natural sciences, medicine, and the social and humanities, and which is driving the development of current research approaches. A closer analysis, however, suggests the hypothesis that universally applicable behavioral rules can be identified across all fields, which lead to decisions by the respective collective.
As part of the 7th subprogram, the interdisciplinary research groups are examining various aspects of this field.
Duration: 2019–2022
How does group composition influence collective perception and decision-making?
Decentralized systems consist of individual units that must coordinate their behavior in order to function as a whole. This can apply to many different biological levels of organization, from the cellular to the organismic level, as well as to human societies and technological systems. Two common aspects of decentralized systems are that individuals differ in their behavior and that the group’s response depends on the efficient aggregation of many individual reactions, each of which occurs solely on the basis of locally available information.
Epithelial cells and honeybee colonies are two biological systems that utilize decentralized collective sensory algorithms. In this project, these two experimental model systems are used to compare collective perception and group behavior mechanisms, with a focus on the following three main questions:
- In what ways do the individuals within the group differ from one another?
- What factors drive task and type differentiation?
- How does the group composition affect its functioning and response to external disturbances?
Publications resulting from the project
- M. Vishwakarma and J. Di Russo (2019): Why Do Epithelial Cells Exhibit Heterogeneity? Bridging Physical and Biological Concepts. Biophysical Reviews 11(5): 683–87.https://doi.org/10.1007/s12551-019-00583-6
- M.L. Smith, J.D. Davidson, B. Wild, D. Dormagen, T. Landgraf & I.D. Couzin (2019): Lifetime Tracking of Bees Reveals Individual-Level Variability in Nest Use with Age. Proceedings of the 3rd International Symposium on Swarm Behavior and Bio-Inspired Robotics (Swarm 2019).
- M. Vishwakarma, B. Thurakkal, J.P. Spatz & T. Das. (2020): Dynamic Heterogeneity Influences the Leader-Follower Dynamics during Epithelial Wound Closure.Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences375 (1807): 20190391.https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2019.0391
- M. Vishwakarma, J. P. Spatz & T. Das (2020): Mechanobiology of Leader-Follower Dynamics in Epithelial Cell Migration. Current Opinion in Cell Biology, Cell Dynamics, 66 (October): 97−103.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ceb.2020.05.007
- J.D. Davidson, M. Vishwakarma, & M.L. Smith (2021): A Hierarchical Approach for Comparing Collective Behavior across Scales: From Cellular Systems to Honey Bee Colonies.Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 9.https://doi.org/10.3389/fevo.2021.581222
More
- M. Vishwakarma, J. Di Russo, D. Probst, U.S. Schwarz, T. Das, & J.P. Spatz (2018): Mechanical Interactions among Followers Determine the Emergence of Leaders in Migrating Epithelial Cell Collectives. Nature Communications9(1): 3469.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-05927-6
- J.D. Davidson & D.M. Gordon (2017): Spatial Organization and Interactions of Harvester Ants during Foraging Activity. Journal of The Royal Society Interface 14(135): 20170413.https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2017.0413
- M.L. Smith, P.A. Koenig & J.M. Peters (2017): The Cues of Colony Size: How Honey Bees Sense That Their Colony Is Large Enough to Begin to Invest in Reproduction. Journal of Experimental Biology220(9), 1597–1605.https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.150342
- J.D. Davidson, R.P. Arauco-Aliaga, S. Crow, D.M. Gordon & M.S. Goldman (2016): Effect of Interactions between Harvester Ants on Forager Decisions. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution 4(115).https://doi.org/10.3389/fevo.2016.00115
- M.L. Smith, M.M. Ostwald & T.D. Seeley (2016): Honey Bee Sociometry: Tracking Honey Bee Colonies and Their Nest Contents from Colony Founding until Death.Insectes Sociaux63(4): 553–63.https://doi.org/10.1007/s00040-016-0499-6
Faculty members
- Jacob D. Davidson, PhD(external link)
- Michael L. Smith, PhD(external link)
- Dr. Medhavi Vishwakarma, PhD(external link)
Project staff
- Benjamin Koger
Duration: 2019–2022
Heterogeneity and Convergence in Shared Data Sources: The Importance of Cognitive Coherence in Collective Decision Making
In the age of the internet, more and more people are participating in collaborative projects such as Wikipedia for encyclopedic knowledge or OpenStreetMap for geographic information (e.g., roads or buildings, but also mountains or forests). Such shared data sources are characterized by the fact that every user can contribute and edit information. Although participants differ greatly in terms of their geographical and situational contexts, surprisingly, a consensus often emerges regarding the shared information at the collective group level.
The WIN project “Shared Data Sources” examines how individual cognitive processes contribute to this convergence at the collective level, using OpenStreetMap as a concrete example.
Publications resulting from the project
- F.B. Mocnik & L. Kühl (2022): (Un)Represented Places – A Case Study of Two Sports Venues in Gelsenkirchen and Dortmund. Proceedings of the 3rd International Symposium on Spatial Information Science(PLATIAL'21), 2022, 25–30.https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5767180
- M. Mayer, D.W. Heck & F.B. Mocnik (2022): Using OpenStreetMap as a Data Source in Psychology and the Social Sciences. PsyArXiv.https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/h3npa
- M. Mayer & D.W. Heck (2021). Sequential Collaboration: Comparing the Accuracy of Dependent, Incremental Judgments to the Wisdom of Crowds.PsyArXiv.https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/w4xdk
- M. Mayer & D.W. Heck (2021): Sequential Collaboration: A More Accurate Alternative to the Wisdom of Crowds.Proceedings of the 63rd Conference of Experimental Psychologists.
- F.B. Mocnik (2021): Benford’s Law and Geographical Information – The Example of OpenStreetMap.International Journal of Geographical Information Science35 (9), 1746–1772.https://doi.org/10.1080/13658816.2020.1829627
- F.B. Mocnik & R. Westerholt (2021): The Effect of Tectonic Plate Motion on Georeferenced Long-Term Global Datasets.International Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation94, 102183.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jag.2020.102183
- D.W. Heck, L. Seiling, & A. Bröder (2020): The love of large numbers revisited: A coherence model of the popularity bias.Cognition, 195, 104069.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2019.104069
- F.B. Mocnik (2020): Tracing Mental Models in Cartographic Datasets – The Case of OpenStreetMap.Proceedings of the Central European Cartographic Conference (EuroCarto).https://doi.org/10.5194/ica-abs-2-5-2020
- M. Mayer, D.W. Heck & F.B. Mocnik (2019): Shared Mental Models as a Psychological Explanation for Converging Mental Representations of Place – the Example of OpenStreetMap. Proceedings of the 2nd International Symposium on Spatial Information Science(PLATIAL'19), 43–50.https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3628871
Faculty members
- Prof. Dr. Daniel Heck(external link)
- Dr. Franz-Benjamin Mocnik(external link)
Project staff
- Laura Kühl
- Maren Mayer
- Karina Rettig
Duration: 2019–2023
Narrated Holiness: Between Individual Choice and Collective Recognition
Holiness is generally understood as a distinction beyond human reach, one that can be defined in a timeless and universally valid manner. What is considered holy, however, is the result of a social process. It can be understood as a collective decision, which in turn is underpinned by individual and institutional decisions made against the backdrop of a theonomic worldview. Such decisions regarding holiness have political, economic, and social relevance that should not be underestimated.
The project explores this tension through hagiographic texts from the Middle Ages and the modern era. Through interdisciplinary collaboration between church history, medieval German studies, and modern German literature, the project aims to examine literary conceptions of holiness across historical periods and disciplinary boundaries, focusing on their diverse functions, their respective historical contexts, and their dependence on collective decision-making processes.
Faculty members
- Dr. Marie Gunreben(external link)
- Dr. Christoph Haack(external link)
Associate Faculty Members
- Dr. Daniela Blum(external link)
- Dr. Beatrice von Lüpke(external link)
Duration: 2019–2023
Fake News and Collective Decision Making: Rapid Automated Assessment of Media Bias
The way the media reports on public debates has a significant impact on collective decision-making processes. Biased reporting can influence the perception of news through specific word choices. Furthermore, reporting can also influence readers’ perceptions through the intentional omission or misrepresentation of certain details. In extreme cases, so-called fake news presents completely false information in order to influence public opinion.
This project combines a rich tradition of research in the social sciences on “media bias” with modern techniques from computer science. The first part of the project focuses on the technical implementation of automated rapid detection of bias using computer science methods. In the second, social science-oriented part, we are engaged in a systematic investigation of how biased representation in the media could best be communicated to promote consensus-building and collective decision-making.
Publications resulting from the project
- F. Hamborg, A. Zhukova, and B. Gipp (2019): Illegal Aliens or Undocumented Immigrants? Towards the Automated Identification of Bias through Word Choice and Labeling. Proceedings of the 14th International Conference on Information (iConference 2019), 179–187.https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-15742-5_17
- F. Hamborg, A. Zhukova, and B. Gipp (2019): Automated Identification of Media Bias through Word Choice and Labeling in News Articles. Proceedings of the ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries (JCDL 2019).https://doi.org/10.1109/JCDL.2019.00036
- F. Hamborg, C. Breitinger, and B. Gipp (2019): Giveme5W1H: A Universal System for Extracting Main Events from News Articles. Proceedings of the 7th International Workshop on News Recommendation and Analytics (INRA 2019).
- F. Hamborg, A. Zhukova, K. Donnay & B. Gipp (2020): Newsalyze: Enabling News Consumers to Understand Media Bias. Proceedings of the ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries(JCDL).https://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3383583.3398561
- T. Spinde, F. Hamborg, A. Becerra, K. Donnay & B. Gipp (2020): Enabling News Consumers to View and Understand Biased News Coverage: A Study on the Perception and Visualization of Media Bias. Proceedings of the ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries(JCDL).https://doi.org/10.1145/3383583.3398619
- F. Hamborg (2020): Media Bias, the Social Sciences, and NLP: Automating Frame Analyses to Identify Bias through Word Choice and Labeling. Proceedings of the 58th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL): Student Research Workshop(ACL-SRW).http://dx.doi.org/10.18653/v1/2020.acl-srw.12
- F. Hamborg, T. Spinde, K. Heinser, K. Donnay, and B. Gipp (2021): How to Effectively Identify and Communicate Person-Targeting Media Bias in Daily News Consumption?Proceedings of the 15th ACM Conference on Recommender Systems, 9th International Workshop on News Recommendation and Analytics (INRA 2021).https://www.gipp.com/wp-content/papercite-data/pdf/hamborg2021b.pdf
- F. Hamborg, K. Heinser, A. Zhukova, K. Donnay, and B. Gipp (2021): Newsalyze: Effective Communication of Person-Targeting Biases in News Articles. Proceedings of the ACM/IEEE Joint Conference on Digital Libraries (JCDL).https://arxiv.org/abs/2110.09158
- F. Hamborg and K. Donnay (2021): NewsMTSC: A Dataset for (Multi-)Target-dependent Sentiment Classification in Political News Articles.Proceedings of the 16th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics (EACL). https://aclanthology.org/2021.eacl-main.142.pdf
Literature
- F. Hamborg, K. Donnay, and B. Gipp (2019): Automated Identification of Media Bias in News Articles: An Interdisciplinary Literature Review. International Journal on Digital Libraries (IJDL).https://doi.org/10.1007/s00799-018-0261-y
- F. Hamborg, N. Meuschke, and B. Gipp (2018): "Bias-Aware News Analysis Using Matrix-Based News Aggregation." International Journal on Digital Libraries (IJDL).https://doi.org/10.1007/s00799-018-0239-9
- F. Hamborg, S. Lachnit, M. Schubotz, T. Hepp, and B. Gipp (2018): Giveme5W: Main Event Retrieval from News Articles by Extraction of the Five Ws. Proceedings of the 13th International Conference on Information (iConference 2018), 356–366.https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-78105-1_39
- F. Hamborg, N. Meuschke, C. Breitinger, and B. Gipp (2017): news-please: A Generic News Crawler and Extractor. Proceedings of the 15th International Symposium on Information Science (ISI 2017), 218–223.
Collegiate
- Dr. Felix Hamborg(external link)
Associate WIN Fellows
- Prof. Dr. Karsten Donnay(external link)
- Prof. Dr. Bela Gipp(external link)
Public Opinion Formation: 2022–2023
Modeling: Duration 2019–2021
A transdisciplinary model for collective decision-making: Opinion formation from linguistic and physical perspectives
This interdisciplinary project examines opinion-forming processes by drawing on various disciplines and employing discipline-specific methods and concepts. Through basic research in the individual disciplines—which will subsequently be integrated—new perspectives on opinion formation and collective decision-making processes can emerge.
In the proposed two-year project extension, the transdisciplinary model was applied, refined, and modified based on the results of the initial development phase, with a specific focus. To ensure this, the project will focus on collaboration between linguistics and physics, while continuing to draw on the biological concepts developed during the first three years of the project.
Publications resulting from the project
- Jacob, Katharina/Landschoff, Jöran/Littek, Carsten/Wolf, Eva: Collective Decision Making. A Transdisciplinary Exchange between Linguistics, Biology, and Physics. Heidelberg University Publishing (submitted: Book Chapter I “Individuals – Collectives – State Spaces”; forthcoming: Book Chapter II “Stability – Dynamics – Decision-Making”).
- Jacob, Katharina/Kowalewski, Louisa (submitted): Decision-making as a communicative practice. A methodological and intralinguistic discussion based on the example of the Stuttgart 21 mediation talks.
- Jacob, Katharina (accepted, expected to be published in 2022): Practicing – Naming – Narrating. Linguistic Perspectives on the Semantics and Narratives of Decision-Making. In: Journal of Literary Studies and Linguistics (LiLi).
- Jacob, Katharina/Landschoff, Jöran (2022): Centrifugal and Centripetal Speech Dynamics in Political Discourse: The Case of the COVID-19 Pandemic Discourse. In: Proceedings of the XIV International Congress of German Studies, Palermo 2021 – Pathways in German Studies from Transcultural Perspectives. Frankfurt am Main, etc.: Peter Lang (Publications of the International Association for German Studies (IVG)), pp. 555–563.
- Jacob, Katharina/Landschoff, Jöran (2022): Stability and Dynamism in Semantics and Grammar: The Case of Discourse on the COVID-19 Pandemic – A Dialogue Following a Digital Semester of Research-Oriented Teaching. In: Aptum 1/2022, pp. 83–105.
- Jacob, Katharina (2019): Communicative Practices in Parliamentary Decision-Making. Mechanisms for Regulating Energy Policy Following a Technological Escalation. In: Große, Sybille/Schlaak, Claudia/Weiland, Verena (eds.): Control and Verbal Escalations / Control and Political Escalations. Politics and Regulation through Language / Politics and Control through Language. Heidelberg: Winter (Studia Romanica 216), pp. 57–73.
- Jacob, Katharina (2017): The Linguistics of Decision-Making. A Communicative Practice from a Functional-Pragmatic and Discourse-Linguistic Perspective. Berlin/Boston: Walter de Gruyter (Language and Knowledge 27).
Faculty members
- Dr. Katharina Jacob(external link)
- Dr. Carsten Littek(external link)
- Dr. Eva Wolf(external link) (2019–2021)
Project staff
- Jöran Landschoff (Research Assistant and Ph.D. candidate in the Linguistics subproject)