EJ Seminar Archives

This the archive page for our ongoing seminar in expert judgment series.

25 april 2023 14:00 t/m 15:00

[SEJ] Joshua Becker: Does communication improve the wisdom of crowds?  It depends on the question.

esearch on the ‘wisdom of crowds’ has consistently shown that one way to improve the accuracy of numeric estimates such as economic forecasting is by using the average estimate of multiple individual contributors, rather than relying on one single person. However, decades of lab experiments have produced contradictory results about whether and when communication between group members makes the resulting average more accurate or less accurate. Thus despite the existence of over 100k results on Google scholar using the “Delphi method” form of information exchange, we lack clear evidence that this method is actually better than unstructured discussion, or that any form of communication is better than none. This talk will explain contradictions in prior research by showing how emergent network centralization interacts with pre-communication estimate distribution such that communication sometimes increases accuracy and sometimes decreases accuracy. Using a formal model of estimate formation and experimental data, I will argue that the fixed effect paradigm—i.e. the assumption that any form of communication is always either helpful or harmful—must be replaced with a model that depends on the particular estimation task under consideration. I will conclude by discussing some limitations of this model for describing true deliberation, sharing some new research under development, and opening the floor for collaborative speculation and brainstorming on how future research might address these topics.

31 januari 2023 14:00 t/m 15:00

[SEJ] Xin Ren: Measuring the impacts of Human and Organizational Factors on human errors in the Dutch construction industry using Structured Expert Judgment

While structural safety has long been viewed and treated with great importance, it remains a fundamental and critical issue in the construction industry. It has been widely acknowledged that the leading cause of structural failures is human error, rather than technical problems. The rise of a new system approach towards human error no longer views it as the cause of accidents or failures, but as a symptom of improper system design, organization, or other troublesome issues embedded inside the socio-technical system. Human errors arise from the working context and situations created by underlying factors such as the working environment and the organizational structure. These factors are the Human and Organizational Factors (HOFs) that can shape people’s performance at work and lead to the occurrence of errors. Therefore, it is important to gain a better understanding of these factors before structural safety can be improved in practice.

A previous study has identified the critical HOFs in the Dutch construction industry. In this study, the impacts of these HOFs on human error occurrences are measured using the Classical Model for Structured Expert Judgment. The survey data are analyzed using the ANDURYL toolbox. As a result, the critical HOFs are quantified for their contribution to the human error occurrence in structural design and construction. In addition, these results are compared with existing studies in other safe-critical industries.

Besides the results, insights into ethical requirements for performing Structured Expert Judgment will be presented.