Collective intelligence

From Opasnet
Jump to: navigation, search



Collective intelligence is a method to build new knowledge based on collaborative efforts.

See also

Newer links

  • Yaron Ezrahi [1] (political theorist): Imagined Democracies: Necessary Political Fictions [2]
  • Dahlander et al. Why now is the time for "open innovation". (related to covid-19) [3]
  • WISE. Miten voisimme edistää läpinäkyvää tietoperusteista päätöksentekoa? (how to promote transparent knowledge-based decision making [4]
  • RTI U.S. Synthetic household population [5]
  • Webinar of UNESCO open science recommendation [6]
  • The GovLab (Noveck et al) 2019: The open policymaking playbook [7]
  • Nesta. The collective intelligence design playbook. report [8] website
    • Nesta Centre for Collective Intelligence Design [9]
  • Nesta & GovLab. Using collective intelligence to solve public problems [10] 2020-10-20
  • GovLab. Using collective intelligence to solve public problems [11]
    • Collective intelligence case studies [12] (including Helsinki Climate Watch)
    • Collective crisis intelligence [13] (about Covid-19)
  • Stefaan Verhulst 2018. Where and when AI and CI meet: exploring the intersection of artificial and collective towards the goal of innovating how we govern [14] https://doi.org/10.1007/s00146-018-0830-z
  • Cicolab. Collective intelligence collaboratory. [15]
  • The GovLab collective intelligence podcast [16] (City of Lakewood Sustainable Neighborhoods Program (with Jonathan Wachtel))
    • Lakewood Sustainability Plans, reports, and projects [17]
  • UNDP and GovLab. Multi city challenge Africa [18]
  • Meinhard Doelle, A. John Sinclair. Time for a new approach to public participation in EA: Promoting cooperation and consensus for sustainability https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eiar.2005.07.013
  • Mark Jurkowitz, Amy Mitchell, Elisa Shearer and Mason Walker. U.S. Media Polarization and the 2020 Election: A Nation Divided. Deep partisan divisions exist in the news sources Americans trust, distrust and rely on. [19] 2020-01-24
  • WIRED Opinion. Psychological microtargeting could actually save politics. The Cambridge Analytica scandal gave psychometrics a bad rap. What if it could be deployed to make politics better? [20]
  • Jan C.Semenza. Public Perception of Climate Change: Voluntary Mitigation and Barriers to Behavior Change. American Journal of Preventive Medicine Volume 35, Issue 5, November 2008, Pages 479-487 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.amepre.2008.08.020
  • Sharon L Harlan, Darren M Ruddell. Climate change and health in cities: impacts of heat and air pollution and potential co-benefits from mitigation and adaptation. Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability Volume 3, Issue 3, May 2011, Pages 126-134. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cosust.2011.01.001


Older links


Related articles in Wikipedia: