expertinput
Expertinput is a term used to describe the practice of incorporating knowledge and judgments from subject-matter experts into decision-making, design, policy development, or evaluation. It can be formal, with structured procedures and documentation, or informal, based on ad hoc consultations. The aim is to supplement generalist perspectives with specialized insight to improve accuracy, feasibility, and legitimacy.
Common approaches include semi-structured interviews, surveys, focus groups, expert panels, and Delphi-style consensus processes. Modern practice
Expertinput is used across fields such as product development, public policy, clinical guidelines, risk assessment, and
Advantages include access to deep domain knowledge, increased credibility, and better alignment with real-world conditions. Limitations
Ethical and governance considerations include ensuring diversity of expertise, mitigating groupthink, and maintaining documentation for auditability.
See also: peer review, Delphi method, expert panel, crowdsourcing.