Standard
Collective intelligence in crises. /
Buscher, Monika; Liegl, Michael; Thomas, Vanessa.
Social collective intelligence: combining the powers of humans and machines to build a smarter society. ed. / Daniele Miorandi; Vincenzo Maltese; Michael Rovatsos; Anton Nijholt; James Stewart. Springer, 2014. p. 243-265 (Computational Social Sciences Series).
Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSN › Chapter (peer-reviewed)
Harvard
Buscher, M, Liegl, M & Thomas, V 2014,
Collective intelligence in crises. in D Miorandi, V Maltese, M Rovatsos, A Nijholt & J Stewart (eds),
Social collective intelligence: combining the powers of humans and machines to build a smarter society. Computational Social Sciences Series, Springer, pp. 243-265.
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-08681-1_12
APA
Buscher, M., Liegl, M., & Thomas, V. (2014).
Collective intelligence in crises. In D. Miorandi, V. Maltese, M. Rovatsos, A. Nijholt, & J. Stewart (Eds.),
Social collective intelligence: combining the powers of humans and machines to build a smarter society (pp. 243-265). (Computational Social Sciences Series). Springer.
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-08681-1_12
Vancouver
Buscher M, Liegl M, Thomas V.
Collective intelligence in crises. In Miorandi D, Maltese V, Rovatsos M, Nijholt A, Stewart J, editors, Social collective intelligence: combining the powers of humans and machines to build a smarter society. Springer. 2014. p. 243-265. (Computational Social Sciences Series). doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-08681-1_12
Author
Bibtex
@inbook{6528a3cb4a5344aa981b8be94c5806ed,
title = "Collective intelligence in crises",
abstract = "New practices of social media use in emergency response seem to enable broader {\textquoteleft}situation awareness{\textquoteright} and new forms of crisis management. The scale and speed of innovation in this field engenders disruptive innovation or a reordering of social, political, economic practices of emergency response. By examining these dynamics with the concept of social collective intelligence, important opportunities and challenges can be examined. In this chapter we focus on socio-technical aspects of social collective intelligence in crises to discuss positive and negative frictions and avenues for innovation. Of particular interest are ways of bridging between collective intelligence in crises and official emergency response efforts.",
author = "Monika Buscher and Michael Liegl and Vanessa Thomas",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-319-08681-1_12",
language = "English",
isbn = "9783319086804",
series = "Computational Social Sciences Series",
publisher = "Springer",
pages = "243--265",
editor = "Daniele Miorandi and Vincenzo Maltese and Michael Rovatsos and Anton Nijholt and James Stewart",
booktitle = "Social collective intelligence",
}
RIS
TY - CHAP
T1 - Collective intelligence in crises
AU - Buscher, Monika
AU - Liegl, Michael
AU - Thomas, Vanessa
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - New practices of social media use in emergency response seem to enable broader ‘situation awareness’ and new forms of crisis management. The scale and speed of innovation in this field engenders disruptive innovation or a reordering of social, political, economic practices of emergency response. By examining these dynamics with the concept of social collective intelligence, important opportunities and challenges can be examined. In this chapter we focus on socio-technical aspects of social collective intelligence in crises to discuss positive and negative frictions and avenues for innovation. Of particular interest are ways of bridging between collective intelligence in crises and official emergency response efforts.
AB - New practices of social media use in emergency response seem to enable broader ‘situation awareness’ and new forms of crisis management. The scale and speed of innovation in this field engenders disruptive innovation or a reordering of social, political, economic practices of emergency response. By examining these dynamics with the concept of social collective intelligence, important opportunities and challenges can be examined. In this chapter we focus on socio-technical aspects of social collective intelligence in crises to discuss positive and negative frictions and avenues for innovation. Of particular interest are ways of bridging between collective intelligence in crises and official emergency response efforts.
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-319-08681-1_12
DO - 10.1007/978-3-319-08681-1_12
M3 - Chapter (peer-reviewed)
SN - 9783319086804
T3 - Computational Social Sciences Series
SP - 243
EP - 265
BT - Social collective intelligence
A2 - Miorandi, Daniele
A2 - Maltese, Vincenzo
A2 - Rovatsos, Michael
A2 - Nijholt, Anton
A2 - Stewart, James
PB - Springer
ER -