Command and control in emergency services operations: A social network analysis
Command and control in emergency services operations: A social network analysis
There is increasing interest in the use of social network analysis as a tool to study the performance of teams and organizations. In this paper, processes of command and control in the emergency services are explored from the perspective of social network theory. We report a set of network analyses (comprising visualization, a selection of mathematical metrics, and a discussion of procedures) based on the observation of six emergency service incidents: three fire service operations involving the treatment of hazardous chemicals, and three police operations involving immediate response to emergency calls. The findings are discussed in terms of our attempts to categorize the network structures against a set of extant command and control network archetypes and the relationship between those structures; comments on the qualities the networks display are put into the contexts of the incidents reported. We suggest that social network analysis may have a valuable part to play in the general study of command and control.
emergency response, command and control, social networks, teams
1204-1225
Houghton, Richard J.
e6c56502-0815-4af9-9de3-989067396225
Baber, Chris
f1a837ac-3e9c-4e55-8eb9-8d393f07c964
McMaster, Richard
6a172820-135b-4fdb-94d1-091d9fe0f1f2
Stanton, Neville A.
351a44ab-09a0-422a-a738-01df1fe0fadd
Salmon, Paul M.
8fcdacc0-31f9-4276-bd9e-8127db6c806e
Stewart, Rebecca
200730cc-7f3c-4cf0-a342-b91603153190
Walker, Guy H.
6439272c-58bb-4463-84d3-61357d91b2b6
2006
Houghton, Richard J.
e6c56502-0815-4af9-9de3-989067396225
Baber, Chris
f1a837ac-3e9c-4e55-8eb9-8d393f07c964
McMaster, Richard
6a172820-135b-4fdb-94d1-091d9fe0f1f2
Stanton, Neville A.
351a44ab-09a0-422a-a738-01df1fe0fadd
Salmon, Paul M.
8fcdacc0-31f9-4276-bd9e-8127db6c806e
Stewart, Rebecca
200730cc-7f3c-4cf0-a342-b91603153190
Walker, Guy H.
6439272c-58bb-4463-84d3-61357d91b2b6
Houghton, Richard J., Baber, Chris, McMaster, Richard, Stanton, Neville A., Salmon, Paul M., Stewart, Rebecca and Walker, Guy H.
(2006)
Command and control in emergency services operations: A social network analysis.
Ergonomics, 49 (12-13), .
(doi:10.1080/00140130600619528).
Abstract
There is increasing interest in the use of social network analysis as a tool to study the performance of teams and organizations. In this paper, processes of command and control in the emergency services are explored from the perspective of social network theory. We report a set of network analyses (comprising visualization, a selection of mathematical metrics, and a discussion of procedures) based on the observation of six emergency service incidents: three fire service operations involving the treatment of hazardous chemicals, and three police operations involving immediate response to emergency calls. The findings are discussed in terms of our attempts to categorize the network structures against a set of extant command and control network archetypes and the relationship between those structures; comments on the qualities the networks display are put into the contexts of the incidents reported. We suggest that social network analysis may have a valuable part to play in the general study of command and control.
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Published date: 2006
Keywords:
emergency response, command and control, social networks, teams
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Local EPrints ID: 73755
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/73755
ISSN: 1366-5847
PURE UUID: d225c9e4-badf-4320-874a-95d9981b884b
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Date deposited: 11 Mar 2010
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:54
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Author:
Richard J. Houghton
Author:
Chris Baber
Author:
Richard McMaster
Author:
Paul M. Salmon
Author:
Rebecca Stewart
Author:
Guy H. Walker
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