Young Ji Kim
University of California, Santa Barbara
19 Papers
13 Citations
Young Ji Kim is an academic researcher from University of California, Santa Barbara. The author has contributed to research in topics: Collective intelligence & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 16 publications. Previous affiliations of Young Ji Kim include Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
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Papers
What Makes a Strong Team?: Using Collective Intelligence to Predict Team Performance in League of Legends
Young Ji Kim,David W. Engel,Anita Williams Woolley,Jeffrey Yu-Ting Lin,Naomi McArthur,Thomas W. Malone +5 more
- 25 Feb 2017
TL;DR: In this study of teams playing the online game League of Legends, it is found that CI does, indeed, predict the competitive performance of teams controlling for the amount of time played as a team.
138
Quantifying collective intelligence in human groups.
TL;DR: This article found that the proportion of women in the group, mediated by average social perceptiveness of group members, predicts performance on various out-of-sample criterion tasks, and overall, group collaboration process is more important in predicting CI than the skill of individual members.
111
Deep Structures of Collaboration: Physiological Correlates of Collective Intelligence and Group Satisfaction
Prerna Chikersal,Maria Tomprou,Young Ji Kim,Anita Williams Woolley,Laura Dabbish +4 more
- 25 Feb 2017
TL;DR: Synchrony in facial expressions was associated with CI and synchrony in electrodermal activity with group satisfaction and various forms of synchrony mediated the effect of member diversity and social perceptiveness on CI and group satisfaction.
99
Visualization of a primary anti-tumor immune response by positron emission tomography
Chengyi J. Shu,Shuling Guo,Young Ji Kim,Stephanie M. Shelly,Amar Nijagal,Pritha Ray,Sanjiv S. Gambhir,Caius G. Radu,Owen N. Witte +8 more
TL;DR: A noninvasive, quantitative, and tomographic approach to visualize a primary anti-tumor immune response by using positron emission tomography (PET) can be used to kinetically measure the induction and therapeutic modulations of cell-mediated immune responses.
90
Speaking out of turn: How video conferencing reduces vocal synchrony and collective intelligence.
TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of nonverbal synchrony on collaborative intelligence was investigated in physically separated teammates. But the results showed that the presence of visual and audio cues surprisingly has no effect on the development of collaborative intelligence.