There is a fairly substantial literature on crowdsourcing methods
Ifthe implicit claim is that crowd sourcing methods and their limitations arepoorly understood, this seems incorrect. I am aware, for instance, of a non-negligiblebody of mathematical literature on the conditions under, and extent to, which variousmethods for aggregating the judgments of a group of individuals would reliablyproduce accurate  outputs. See forinstance the recent work on the so called Condorcet Jury Theorem (Grofman et al1983, Ladha 1992, List & Goodin 2002; full references available on request).There is also a considerable empirical literature on the performance of so-calledprediction markets (see Servan-Schreiber’s contribution to Landemore andElster’s recent Collective Wisdomvolume for some references).
Immediately related elementsHow this works
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Crowdsourcing and multi-disciplinary risk assessment? »Crowdsourcing and multi-disciplinary risk assessment?
Against the Proposition »Against the Proposition
Statistical methods, and their limitations, are well established »Statistical methods, and their limitations, are well established
There is a fairly substantial literature on crowdsourcing methods
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