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From ethnography to the EAST method: A tractable approach for representing distributed cognition in air traffic control

From ethnography to the EAST method: A tractable approach for representing distributed cognition in air traffic control
From ethnography to the EAST method: A tractable approach for representing distributed cognition in air traffic control
Command and control is a generic activity involving the exercise of authority over assigned resources, combined with planning, coordinating and controlling how those resources are used. The challenge for understanding this type of activity is that it is not often amenable to the conventional experimental/methodological approach. Command and control tends to be multi-faceted (so requires more than one method), is made up of interacting socio and technical elements (so requires a systemic approach) and exhibits aggregate behaviours that emerge from these interactions (so requires methods that go beyond reductionism). In these circumstances a distributed cognition approach is highly appropriate yet the existing ethnographic methods make it difficult to apply and, for non-specialist audiences, sometimes difficult to meaningfully interpret. The Event Analysis for Systemic Teamwork method is put forward as a means of working from a distributed cognition perspective but in a way that goes beyond ethnography. A worked example from Air Traffic Control is used to illustrate how the language of social science can be translated into the language of systems analysis.
distributed cognition, air traffic control, command and control, situational awareness
1366-5847
184-197
Walker, Guy H.
6439272c-58bb-4463-84d3-61357d91b2b6
Stanton, Neville A.
351a44ab-09a0-422a-a738-01df1fe0fadd
Baber, Chris
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Wells, Linda
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Gibson, Huw
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Salmon, Paul M.
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Jenkins, Daniel P.
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Walker, Guy H.
6439272c-58bb-4463-84d3-61357d91b2b6
Stanton, Neville A.
351a44ab-09a0-422a-a738-01df1fe0fadd
Baber, Chris
f1a837ac-3e9c-4e55-8eb9-8d393f07c964
Wells, Linda
9f3aab0a-f247-4982-bafb-7f4ad92fbecf
Gibson, Huw
e7dcb30b-97d9-4ce7-95c8-a4d2763c1ab8
Salmon, Paul M.
8fcdacc0-31f9-4276-bd9e-8127db6c806e
Jenkins, Daniel P.
b970d85d-651e-41a5-8a5f-fee336df848c

Walker, Guy H., Stanton, Neville A., Baber, Chris, Wells, Linda, Gibson, Huw, Salmon, Paul M. and Jenkins, Daniel P. (2010) From ethnography to the EAST method: A tractable approach for representing distributed cognition in air traffic control. Ergonomics, 53 (2), 184-197. (doi:10.1080/00140130903171672).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Command and control is a generic activity involving the exercise of authority over assigned resources, combined with planning, coordinating and controlling how those resources are used. The challenge for understanding this type of activity is that it is not often amenable to the conventional experimental/methodological approach. Command and control tends to be multi-faceted (so requires more than one method), is made up of interacting socio and technical elements (so requires a systemic approach) and exhibits aggregate behaviours that emerge from these interactions (so requires methods that go beyond reductionism). In these circumstances a distributed cognition approach is highly appropriate yet the existing ethnographic methods make it difficult to apply and, for non-specialist audiences, sometimes difficult to meaningfully interpret. The Event Analysis for Systemic Teamwork method is put forward as a means of working from a distributed cognition perspective but in a way that goes beyond ethnography. A worked example from Air Traffic Control is used to illustrate how the language of social science can be translated into the language of systems analysis.

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More information

Published date: 2010
Keywords: distributed cognition, air traffic control, command and control, situational awareness

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 186481
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/186481
ISSN: 1366-5847
PURE UUID: 0aa89c6a-a9b7-4d41-9f56-810320d13960
ORCID for Neville A. Stanton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8562-3279

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Date deposited: 13 May 2011 12:34
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:33

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Contributors

Author: Guy H. Walker
Author: Chris Baber
Author: Linda Wells
Author: Huw Gibson
Author: Paul M. Salmon
Author: Daniel P. Jenkins

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