DiCoT: understanding complex socio-technical systems in terms of Distributed Cognition
Speaker: Ann Blandford – London, United KingdomTopic(s): Human Computer Interaction
Abstract
Distributed Cognition (DCog) is a widely used approach to reasoning about group working and the design of artefacts within work systems. It has been applied particularly in safety-critical contexts such as transport, control rooms and healthcare. DiCoT (Distributed Cognition for Teamwork) is a methodology and representational system to support DCog analysis for small team working. It draws on ideas from Contextual Design but re-orients them towards the principles that are central to DCog. It can be used to reason about both the strengths and limitations of existing system designs, highlighting future design requirements. The approach has been developed and tested in contexts including ambulance control, underground control, hospitals (intensive care, wards, and the operating theatre), and people's homes (focusing on the design, implementation and use of healthcare technologies at home).
In this talk, I will present the theory of DCog and the practice of conducting a DiCoT analysis, drawing on examples from a variety of technology-intensive contexts of working.
About this Lecture
Number of Slides: 35Duration: 60 minutes
Languages Available: English
Last Updated:
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