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Impact Factor:1.078 | Ranking:Psychology, Social 46 out of 62 | Psychology, Applied 49 out of 79 | Management 118 out of 192
Source:2016 Release of Journal Citation Reports with Source: 2015 Web of Science Data

On the Effectiveness of Group Brainstorming

Test of One Underlying Cognitive Mechanism

  1. Sherry K. Schneider
    1. University of Arizona

Abstract

Recent studies suggest that group brainstorming, in its electronic form, can be an effective method of generating ideas, if the group is sufficiently large. We report here an experiment probing the mechanism underlying this good performance. Because larger groups are more likely than small ones to generate rare ideas, we hypothesized that rare ideas might be especially stimulating to further idea generation, and thus boost the performance of large, interacting groups. Experimental subjects working alone generated ideas while exposed to streams of either rare, common, or no stimulus ideas. No support for the hypothesized stimulating effect of rare ideas was found. We suggest several alternative mechanisms worth exploring.

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