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dc.contributor.authorRodas Osollo, Jorge Enrique
dc.date.accessioned2026-01-08T15:51:25Z
dc.date.available2026-01-08T15:51:25Z
dc.date.issued2025-12-30es_MX
dc.identifier.urihttps://cathi.uacj.mx/20.500.11961/33466
dc.description.abstractSociotechnical collective intelligence (STCI) represents a transformative paradigm in knowledge production, in which integrated systems of human and artificial intelligence (AI) achieve synergistic capabilities that exceed the scope of either system alone. This article establishes its philosophical foundations by bridging the gap between Michael Polanyi's classic paradox of tacit knowledge — that ‘we know more than we can express’ — and modern cognitive theories of entropic memory (which harnesses productive disorder for creativity) and associative memory (which connects disparate concepts). From this synthesis, three fundamental architectural pillars for effective STCI are derived: Augmented transactional memory, which merges human experiential, contextual, and tacit knowledge with scalable data processing and AI pattern recognition; Coordinated transactional attention, which dynamically allocates cognitive resources across the system, balancing focus and exploratory entropy to drive adaptive problem solving; Hybrid transactional reasoning, where collective judgements arise from the interaction between computational rationality and human intuitive, ethical, and evaluative judgement. Using principles from network science, we demonstrate how a system's connection topology dictates its collective effectiveness depending on the type of problem. While efficient, densely connected networks excel at quickly solving well-defined problems, inefficient, more sparse networks with longer paths are crucial for maintaining the cognitive diversity and potential for variation needed to tackle novel, ambiguous, or complex challenges. This framework reveals tensions inherent in current AI, particularly in large language models (LLMs), which often act as homogenising “central tendencies” that can suppress the diversity required by STCI. Applications are examined in: Collaborative medical diagnosis, where AI crosses references from a vast medical literature with the doctor's patient-specific tacit knowledge; AI-augmented emergency response, where human teams coordinate with AI simulations for real-time logistics and scenario modelling; Hybrid scientific research, where AI-driven data analysis and hypothesis generation are guided by scientists' theoretical vision and experimental intuition. In each domain, knowledge is shown to be a genuinely distributed property of the socio-technical network, emerging from collective processes in which controlled indeterminacy—managed randomness and diversity—becomes a source of innovation without compromising systemic reliability. The analysis also addresses fundamental ethical and epistemological challenges: the allocation of distributed responsibility in hybrid decisions, the mitigation of the risks of algorithmic homogenisation, and the management of the tension between the democratisation of knowledge and the rise of a new techno-elitism. It concludes that STCI is not simply a tool that extends human cognition, but a fundamental evolution in the architecture of knowledge itself. It signifies a shift towards heterogeneous cognitive ecosystems capable of building genuinely emergent knowledge. This requires cultivating a new form of hybrid competence: the literacy and wisdom to manage these systems in ways that preserve essential human virtues: autonomy, moral responsibility, and contextual wisdom.es_MX
dc.description.urihttps://www.researchgate.net/publication/399208459_Collective_Intelligence_When_We_Know_More_Together_Than_We_Think_Possiblees_MX
dc.language.isoenes_MX
dc.relation.ispartofProducto de investigación IIT
dc.relation.ispartofInstituto de Ingeniería y Tecnología
dc.rightsCC0 1.0 Universal*
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/*
dc.subjectCollective intelligencees_MX
dc.subjectSociotechnical systemses_MX
dc.subjectTransactive memoryes_MX
dc.subjectCognitive emergencees_MX
dc.subjectDistributed responsibilityes_MX
dc.subjectHuman–AI collaborationes_MX
dc.subjectSociocognitive architectureses_MX
dc.subjectDistributed knowledgees_MX
dc.subjectHybrid responsibilityes_MX
dc.subjectMetacognitive competencees_MX
dc.subjectProductive entropyes_MX
dc.subjectInformational efficiencyes_MX
dc.subject.otherinfo:eu-repo/classification/cti/1es_MX
dc.titleCollective Intelligence: When We Know More Together Than We Think Possiblees_MX
dc.typeDivulgación
dcterms.thumbnailhttp://ri.uacj.mx/vufind/thumbnails/rupiiit.png
dcrupi.institutoInstituto de Ingeniería y Tecnología
dcrupi.cosechableNo
dcrupi.subtipoInvestigación
dcrupi.alcanceInternacionales_MX
dcrupi.institucionextReseachGatees_MX
dcrupi.tipoparticipacionCiencia ciudadana, redes sociales o blogses_MX
dcrupi.impactosocialSi. El impacto social de esta publicación es su potencial para transformar a la sociedad, pasando de ser consumidores pasivos de IA a arquitectos activos de una inteligencia colectiva ética y eficaz, proporcionando un marco crítico para diseñar, gobernar y participar en sistemas híbridos humano-IA. Al articular los pilares arquitectónicos —memoria aumentada, atención coordinada y razonamiento híbrido—, ofrece un plan para construir instituciones colaborativas en medicina, ciencia y respuesta a crisis que fomenten la cognición simbiótica en lugar de la mera automatización. Su análisis dota a los responsables políticos, los educadores y el público de los medios necesarios para exigir sistemas que preserven la diversidad epistémica y el juicio humano, desafiando directamente las fuerzas homogeneizadoras de la IA a gran escala y ofreciendo herramientas para navegar por las tensiones éticas de la responsabilidad distribuida y el tecnoconservadurismo. En última instancia, la obra cambia la narrativa cultural, abogando por el cultivo de la competencia híbrida para gestionar un futuro en el que las redes sociotécnicas mejoren la sabiduría colectiva sin erosionar la autonomía humana y la responsabilidad moral.es_MX
dcrupi.vinculadoproyextNoes_MX
dcrupi.pronacesCulturaes_MX
dcrupi.vinculadoproyintNoes_MX
dcrupi.difusionInternetes_MX


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