Decision inertia: Deciding between least worst outcomes in emergency responses to disasters

被引:57
作者
Alison, Laurence [1 ]
Power, Nicola [1 ]
van den Heuvel, Claudia [1 ]
Humann, Michael [1 ]
Palasinksi, Marek [1 ]
Crego, Jonathan [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Liverpool, Ctr Crit & Major Incident Psychol, Liverpool L69 7ZA, Merseyside, England
关键词
multiteam systems; communication; interoperability; time urgency; team size; strategic goals; decision inertia; naturalistic decision-making; TEAM EFFECTIVENESS; PROSPECT-THEORY; TIME PRESSURE; CHOICE; MODEL; COORDINATION; MACROCOGNITION; ACCOUNTABILITY; COMMUNICATION; UNCERTAINTY;
D O I
10.1111/joop.12108
中图分类号
B849 [应用心理学];
学科分类号
040203 ;
摘要
This study demonstrates how naturalistic decision-making (NDM) can be usefully applied to study decision inertia' - Namely the cognitive process associated with failures to execute action when a decision-maker struggles to choose between equally perceived aversive outcomes. Data assessed the response and recovery from a sudden impact disaster during a 2-day immersive simulated emergency response. Fourteen agencies (including police, fire, ambulance, and military) and 194 participants were involved in the exercise. By assessing the frequency, type, audience, and content of communications, and by reference to five subject matter experts' slow time analyses of critical turning points during the incident, three barriers were identified as reducing multiagency information sharing and the macrocognitive understanding of the incident. When the decision problem was non-time-bounded, involved multiple agencies, and identification of superordinate goals was lacking, the communication between agencies decreased and agencies focused on within-agency information sharing. These barriers distracted teams from timely and efficient discussions on decisions and action execution with seeking redundant information, which resulted in decision inertia. Our study illustrates how naturalistic environments are conducive to examining relatively understudied concepts of decision inertia, failures to act, and shared situational macrocognition in situations involving large distributed teams.
引用
收藏
页码:295 / 321
页数:27
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