Dealing With Heterogeneous Information in Multi-Criteria Group Decision-Making Problems: A Comprehensive Design Framework — Matheus Pereira Libório (2025) | RDL Network
Dealing With Heterogeneous Information in Multi-Criteria Group Decision-Making Problems: A Comprehensive Design Framework
Article 2025 en
Authors
ML
Matheus Pereira Libório
PE
Petr Ekel
MD
Marcos Flávio Silveira Vasconcelos D’Ângelo
Abstract
1 min read
This study provides a comprehensive review of the literature on group decision-making with heterogeneous information, aiming to identify the main characteristics in this field, highlight gaps, and suggest new promising approaches and methods to overcome current limitations. The research reveals the main research front directions, key authors, most common application areas, the most frequently used preference formats, and aggregation schemes in existing studies. The research innovation and originality lie in developing five new approaches and methods to overcome the identified gaps and limitations. First, a transparent, comprehensive, and intuitive framework for dealing with heterogeneous information in multi-criteria group decision problems is proposed. Second, a standardization scheme is introduced to define the name of the preference format when it has many names and establish a standard naming structure for all formats. Third, an easy-to-follow framework for categorizing existing and new formats is studied to facilitate an understanding of the structure of each format. Fourth, the new “relational ordered preference” is introduced, a format that increases agility and accuracy in alternative assessments. Fifth, we introduce a pioneering aggregation scheme (consensus-based ordered weighted averaging operator) to maximize the consensus level between individual and collective assessments. An illustrative and a real-world example are also provided. The example of the governance composite indicator demonstrates that relational ordered preference enhances the accuracy of assessments and, consequently, increases the degree of consensus. In turn, the consensus-based approach achieved higher degrees of consensus than extreme value reductions, indicating that preserving more convergent opinions contributes more to consensus than preserving intermediate opinions.
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