Vellekoop and
colleagues shared their estimates in the June 2016 Geology.
Not exact matches
In a new study published in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface, researchers Albert Kao (Harvard University), Andrew Berdahl (Santa Fe Institute), and their
colleagues examined just how accurate our collective intelligence is and how individual bias and information
sharing skew aggregate
estimates.
In 1996, Gregory Wray of the State University of New York, Stony Brook, and his
colleagues shook up these assumptions when they published a paper in Science (25 October 1996, p. 568) that — by averaging the mutation rates of eight genes
shared by animals and nonanimals —
estimated that animals arose about 1 billion to 1.2 billion years ago.
In a new study published in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface, incoming Omidyar Fellow Albert Kao (Harvard University), Omidyar Fellow Andrew Berdahl, and their
colleagues examined just how accurate our collective intelligence is and how individual bias and information
sharing skew aggregate
estimates.