Method to integrate asynchronously produced individual influence maps into an extrapolated population influence map following the face-to-face stage of a structured democratic dialogue

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Method to integrate asynchronously produced individual influence maps into an extrapolated population influence map following the face-to-face stage of a structured democratic dialogue
Method to integrate asynchronously produced individual influence maps into an extrapolated population influence map following the face-to-face stage of a structured democratic dialogue
Authors Yiannis Laouris
Journal Systems Research & Behavioral Science
Volume 40(3)
Pages 437-450
Year 6 May 2022
Link https://doi.org/10.1002/sres.2877



Abstract

We present a method that broadens the application of structured democratic dialogue (SDD). After completing the final stage of the SDD process, during which the participants explore collectively and synchronously possible influence relations between ideas using the interpretive structural modelling (ISM) algorithm, they continue the ISM process individually and asynchronously. Their respective adjacency matrices (AM) are integrated into a population AM (pAM) that reflects their least agreement denominator. The pAM is sent back to them in a few iterations, asking them to explore influence relations between additional ideas. This procedure eventually produces a model, which depicts their ‘extrapolated’ or ‘computed’ collective wisdom. The method has been applied in two projects. Participants who responded to a requested assessment (via a Likert scale) indicated that the extrapolated influence maps created asynchronously made sense.

Citation

Laouris, Y. (2023). Method to integrate asynchronously produced individual influence maps into an extrapolated population influence map following the face‐to‐face stage of a structured democratic dialogue. Systems Research and Behavioral Science, 40(3), 437-450.

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