Audience Decision-Making Expertise 29
The Causes of Groups of Experts’ Normally Inferior Performance
One might expect groups of experts to outperform individual experts and to match the perfor-
mance of linear models. After all, a crowd’s average answer to a factual question is typically more
accurate than an individual’s answer, given that the average of many different answers cancels out
the errors of individual answers.^261 So it’s a surprise to learn that groups usually make decisions that
are inferior to those made by their most expert members and may perform considerably worse than
even their average members on some tasks.^262
Majorities/pluralities, not the most knowledgeable members, “win” most of the time.^263
Majority/plurality rule has been observed in a variety of group-level audience decisions, includ-
ing decisions made by mock juries,^264 groups of investors,^265 groups of voters,^266 budgetary
committees,^267 and teams of recruiters.^268 Even when they know the right answers to factual
questions, minority members tend to succumb to majority pressure and act against their better
judgment.^269
Majority/plurality rule is particularly prevalent when a group does not share a schema for
making the decision they need to make.^270 Thus, it may not enhance group performance if
a minority of group members has the expertise needed to make a good decision since many
group members may neither appreciate their expertise or use it. Without a shared schema, the
majority of group members may assume the most confi dent and verbose among them is the
most expert,^271 although these traits rarely correlate with accuracy.^272
The Importance of Expert Audiences Despite Their Limitations
While acknowledging the limitations of experts to weight decision criteria appropriately and their
deviations from normative decision-making processes, professionals must still understand experts
and be able to convince them.
Expert audiences have the fi nal say in most decisions and are not likely be replaced altogether
by linear models any time soon. The judgments of expert audiences are perceived as fairer than the
judgments of linear models.^273 Expert audiences are still indispensable for selecting, weighting, and
measuring the criteria that go into linear models^274 and for discovering new decision criteria.^275 In
addition, expert audiences have the ability to recognize rare but highly diagnostic cues that may not
TABLE 1.2 The Decision Performance of Experts Depends on Their Domain
Better Performance
Domains Concerning Things
Poorer Performance
Domains Concerning People
Weather forecasting Clinical psychology
Astronomy Astrology
Aeronautics Student admissions
Agriculture Law
Chess Behavioral research
Physics Counseling
Mathematics Human resources
Accounting Parole granting
Actuarial statistics Stock market investing
Source: Adapted from Shanteau (1992)