R. Scott Tindale
| Title: | Professor, Ph.D. |
Office: | 339 Coffey Hall | |
Phone: | 773.508.3014 | |
E-mail: | rtindal@luc.edu |
Personal Information
Ph.D., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (1984)
Research Interests:
Most of my research involves issues of information processing and social influence in individual and group decision making. Specifically, my recent research has focused on how group members can share certain representations of a task (or certain cognitive processes/heuristics activated by the task) and how these shared representations impact on group decision performance and intra-group influence processes. For example, although groups often out-perform individuals in many task domains, we have found that for certain types of decision problems (particularly those involving the use of probabilistic information), groups perform below the levels of an average individual. In such cases, we have found that dominant, but biased, task representations shared among the group members tend to give factions favoring alternatives consistent with such representations greater power within the group. I am also interested in the effects of procedures on group performance, and on how group members perceive procedures, particularly in terms of procedural fairness and efficiency. My applied interests revolve around legal settings, particularly as they relate to juries, and decision making groups in organizations. Most recently, he and his research team have applied these notions to issues concerning the optimal ways to distribute information across group members and how shared norms can lead groups to behave unethically.
Recent Publications:
- Kerr, N. L., & Tindale, R. S. (2004). Small group decision making and performance. Annual Review of Psychology, 55, 623-656.
- Tindale, R. S., Kameda, T., & Hinsz, V. B. (2003). Group decision making. In J. Cooper & M. Hogg (Eds.) Sage Handbook of Social Psychology (pp. 381 - 403). London: Sage Publications.
- Tindale, R. S., & Sheffey, S. (2002). Shared information, cognitive load, and group memory. Group Processes and Intergroup Relations, 5, 5 - 18.
- Morgan, P. M., & Tindale, R. S. (2002). Group vs. individual performance in mixed motive situations: Exploring an inconsistency. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 87, 44-65.
- Tindale, R. S., Meisenhelder, H. M., Dykema-Engblade, A. A., & Hogg, M. A. (2001). Shared cognitions in small groups. In M. A. Hogg & R. S. Tindale (Eds.) Blackwell handbook in social psychology: Group processes (pp. 1 - 30). Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishers.
View my full CV here.