A Cognitive Description of Collaboration and Coordination to Help Teams Identify and Fix Problems

Abstract

This paper describes how team collaboration and coordination work from a cognitive perspective, with the goal of helping explain guidelines for diagnosing and fixing team problems. These guidelines are based on the tautology that teams provided with appropriate communications connectivity can collaborate effectively if individual team members know what they need to know to do so, and that teams whose members lack this knowledge are prone to various kinds of predictable collaboration problems. The guidelines describe collaboration and coordination problems that arise from various kinds of knowledge shortfalls, provide metrics for the risk and occurrence of these problems, and suggest processes and tools to avoid or fix team difficulties. The paper begins by summarizing the benefits and costs of teamwork. It next describes the knowledge that team members need to work together effectively, and reviews the interaction of this knowledge with team dynamics. It then summarizes seven causes of team behavioral problems that may arise from knowledge gaps, errors, and inconsistencies. The article concludes by describing the guidelines for diagnosing and correcting team problems.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Sep 01, 2002
Accession Number
ADA467861

Entities

People

  • David Noble

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Engineered Resilient Systems
  • Materials and Manufacturing Processes

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Behavior And Behavior Mechanisms
  • Behavioral Disciplines And Activities
  • Behavioral Sciences
  • Case Studies
  • Delphi Method
  • Electronic Mail
  • Group Dynamics
  • Information Operations
  • Military Operations
  • Military Research
  • Misalignment
  • New York
  • Psychology
  • Risk Factors
  • Social Psychology
  • Teamwork
  • Vulnerability

Fields of Study

  • Computer science

Readers

  • Agent-Based Social Robotics and Mobile-Assisted Learning in Virtual Environments.
  • Joint Military Operations and Doctrine.
  • Systems Analysis and Design