The experimental foundation of group polarization research extends from James Stoner's 1961 'risky shift' studies through decades of subsequent work demonstrating the phenomenon's operation across diverse domains — jury deliberation, political opinion formation, investment decisions, ideological radicalization. The empirical signature is consistent: groups composed of individuals leaning in one direction on a topic produce, after deliberation, aggregate positions more extreme than the average pre-deliberation position of the group's members. The mechanism is not confined to explicitly political topics; it operates wherever groups of like-minded individuals exchange views with one another, which is to say, in nearly every social environment in which sustained discussion occurs.
In the AI discourse, group polarization operated alongside the spiral of silence to produce the binary camps that characterize the visible discourse. The technology industry's professional environments — conferences, Slack channels, investor communities — functioned as polarization engines for the triumphalist camp. Discussion among enthusiasts surfaced arguments that favored enthusiasm (informational influence), and each participant's perception of peer enthusiasm raised the threshold for expressing anything less (social influence). The result was the triumphalist hardcore's progressive movement toward more extreme positions — from 'AI is transformative' to 'AI is inevitable' to 'resistance is obsolete' — across the period 2023–2026.
The intellectual community's professional environments — humanities departments, cultural commentary publications, critical theory workshops — functioned as polarization engines for the catastrophist camp through the same mechanism operating in reverse. Discussion among critics surfaced arguments that favored criticism, and each participant's perception of peer concern raised the threshold for expressing anything less. The catastrophist hardcore moved toward more extreme positions across the same period — from 'AI raises serious concerns' to 'AI threatens meaning' to 'AI represents an existential capture of human cognition.' Both polarization processes operated independently, each in its own community, and the distance between the two resulting positions widened with each cycle of discussion.
The combination of group polarization with the spiral of silence produces what Sunstein called 'enclave deliberation': discussion environments that reinforce and extend rather than correct the participants' initial tendencies. The spiral silences moderates within each community (nuanced voices generate social cost in environments polarized around a strong position), while group polarization drives the remaining voices toward the extremes. The compound effect explains the characteristic shape of the AI discourse: two camps progressively more distant from each other and progressively more distant from the ambivalent direct experience that characterizes most informed practitioners. The silent middle is doubly produced — by the spiral's silencing of nuance within each community and by polarization's radicalization of the remaining voices.
Stoner's 1961 dissertation on the 'risky shift' launched the research program on group polarization, though the phenomenon had been observed informally for decades. Sunstein's synthesis in works including Going to Extremes (2009) extended the framework into applications in constitutional law, political behavior, and democratic theory. The interaction between group polarization and Noelle-Neumann's spiral of silence has been explored in later scholarship that treats the two mechanisms as complementary rather than competing explanations of opinion formation dynamics.
Like-minded discussion produces extremity. Groups composed of individuals leaning in one direction produce aggregate positions more extreme than the pre-deliberation group average, rather than converging toward moderation.
Dual mechanism. The phenomenon operates through both informational influence (arguments favoring the existing tendency) and social influence (perception of peer views as more extreme than one's own).
Enclave deliberation. Discussion environments composed of like-minded participants reinforce and extend rather than correct initial tendencies, producing progressively more extreme aggregate positions.
Compound with spiral. When combined with Noelle-Neumann's spiral of silence, group polarization produces the characteristic binary camps of contemporary discourse, with moderates silenced within each camp and remaining voices progressively radicalized.
AI discourse application. The triumphalist and catastrophist camps have each undergone polarization across the 2023–2026 period, producing positions progressively more distant from the ambivalent direct experience characteristic of informed practitioners.