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| Collective Intelligence is referred to as the capacity of a human community to evolve toward higher order complexity thought, problem-solving and integration through collaboration and innovation.
| | See [[Collaborative Intelligence]] |
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| =Definitions=
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| Tom Attlee of the Co-Intelligence Institute has a restricted definition of collective intelligence, which he considers to be 'only one-fifth of co-intelligence', see http://www.co-intelligence.org/Collective_Intelligence.html
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| Mark Elliot of MetaCollab offers the following definition at
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| http://collaboration.wikia.com/wiki/Collaborative_intelligence
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| "Collaborative Intelligence (CI) or collaborative intelligence quotient is a measure of the collaborative ability of a group or entity and speaks of the problem solving cabability of a group being much greater than the knowledge possessed by an individual group member. The ability for a group to solve a problem collectively is directly proportional to the number of members in a group. Knowledge derived from collaborative efforts is increasing proportionally to the reach of the world wide web, collaborative groupware like net meeting, and webex, and collaborative peer-to-peer projects like Wikipedia."
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| =Taxonomy of Collective Intelligence=
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| Proposed by George Por at http://www.community-intelligence.com/blogs/public/2006/05/forms_of_collective_intelligen.html
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| "a. '''Dialogic CI''' – A diverse group of participants suspend their old mental models and engage in dialogue that values the emergent whole higher than its parts. Variations of this approach include Bohmian dialogue, "generative conversation" (Otto Scharmer) and "enlightened communications" (Andrew Cohen).
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| b. '''Co-evolutionary CI''' – This form of CI builds on the power of such evolutionary mechanisms generating intelligence over time as trial and error, differentiation and integration, competition and collaboration, etc. Its examples include: ecosystems, sciences, and cultures.
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| c. '''Flow-based CI''' – A group of people become so absorbed in a shared activity that they experience being completely at one with it and one another. Ensembles, high-performance sport teams, astronauts, and others in that state of communion, report on both an enhanced state of autonomy, and collective intelligence.
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| d. '''Statistical CI''' - Individuals thinking and acting separately in large crowds can reach successful conclusion about their collective cognitive, coordination or predictive challenges. Examples include the "intelligence" of markets and cases popularized in the "Wisdom of Crowds" by James Surowiecki.
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| e. '''Human-machine CI''' – This form of CI leverages the synergy of the human mind and its electronic extensions, drawing on the best capacities of both. The "collective" includes symbiotic networks of humans and computers working together and developing compound capabilities. It can also support all other forms of CI."
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| (http://www.community-intelligence.com/blogs/public/2006/05/forms_of_collective_intelligen.html)
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| =More Information=
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| #Jean-Francois Noubel. Collective Intelligence. [http://p2pfoundation.net/index.php/Collective_Intelligence_-_Jean-Francois_Noubel]
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| Primer from 2004
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| #Pierre Levy, Aux Origines de L'Intelligence Collective, at http://www.archipress.org/levy/aql.htm
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| Excerpt from a book, on historical precedents for the concept.
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| #The Website on Co-Intelligence, by Tom Attlee, at http://www.co-intelligence.org/
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| [[Category:Encyclopedia]] | |
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| [[Category:Business]]
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| [[Category:Education]]
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| [[Category:IP]]
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| [[Category:Relational]]
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| [[Category:Politics]]
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| [[Category:Facilitation]]
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| [[Category:Intelligence]]
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