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Designing Stress Resistant Organizations demonstrates, in a
persuasive way, how computational organization theory can be
applied to advance the field of management with its successful
integration of theory and practice.
At the theoretical level, the book contains a comprehensive
computational framework called DYCORP, which simulates dynamic and
interactive organizational behaviors by incorporating multiple
factors such as organizational design, task environment, and
stress, and which generates consistent and insightful propositions
on organizational performance.
The book utilizes an organization science based approach to
computational modeling. This approach recognizes the limit of human
cognition as it was outlined by Herbert A. Simon in 1947. The model
strives to focus on the essence of the reality that is most
relevant to the research issue. This approach has been proven to be
more beneficial for us to understand the underlying dynamics of the
phenomenon.
This volume represents an advance in our understanding of how to
represent and reason about organizational phenomena. Although
organizational theorists have long grappled with the complexities
of adaptive agents, ecological systems, and non-linear relations
among the basic elements of organizational design, they have not,
until recently, had the tools to grapple with these complex
relationships. Recent advances in logic, symbolic programming,
network analysis, and computer technology have made possible a
series of tools that can be used to understand the complexities of
organizational behavior. New computational techniques make it
possible to develop and test more realistic models of
organizational behavior. This volume offers examples of this new
breed of models, and provides insight into how these advances and
techniques can be used to extend our theoretical understanding of
organizations.
Authored by leading researchers in the area of computational
organization theory, the various chapters demonstrate the value of
computational analysis for organizational theory and advance our
understanding of the relationship between organizational design and
performance. This book contains both theoretical and methodological
contributions that enable organizational theorists to use
computational and mathematical techniques to systematically address
the complex relationships that underlie organizational life. It
also presents new -- or sometimes, renewed -- approaches on how to
conduct organizational research from multiple formal perspectives
including: simulation, numerical analysis, symbolic logic,
mathematical modeling, and graph theory.
This book bridges an important gap between two major approaches to
mass communication -- historical and social scientific. To do so,
it employs a theory of communication that unifies social, cultural
and technological concerns into a systematic and formal framework
that is then used to examine the impact of print within the larger
socio-cultural context and across multiple historical contexts. The
authors integrate historical studies and more abstract formal
representations, achieving a set of logically coherent and
well-delimited hypotheses that invite further exploration, both
historically and experimentally.
A second gap that the book addresses is in the area of formal
models of communication and diffusion. Such models typically assume
a homogeneous population and a communication whose message is
abstracted from the complexities of language processing. In
contrast, the model presented in this book treats the population as
heterogeneous and communications as potentially variable in their
content as they move across speakers or readers.
Written to address and overcome many of the disciplinary divisions
that have prevented the study of print from being approached from
the perspective of a unified theory, this book employs a focused
interdisciplinary position that encompasses several domains. It
shows the underlying compatibility between cognitive and social
theory; between the study of language and cognition and the study
of technology; between the postmodern interest in the instability
of meaning and the social science interest in the diffusion of
information; between the effects of technology and issues of
cultural homogeneity and heterogeneity. Overall, this book
revealshow small, relatively non-interactive, disciplinary-specific
conversations about print are usefully conceived of as part of a
larger interdisciplinary inquiry.
This volume represents an advance in our understanding of how to
represent and reason about organizational phenomena. Although
organizational theorists have long grappled with the complexities
of adaptive agents, ecological systems, and non-linear relations
among the basic elements of organizational design, they have not,
until recently, had the tools to grapple with these complex
relationships. Recent advances in logic, symbolic programming,
network analysis, and computer technology have made possible a
series of tools that can be used to understand the complexities of
organizational behavior. New computational techniques make it
possible to develop and test more realistic models of
organizational behavior. This volume offers examples of this new
breed of models, and provides insight into how these advances and
techniques can be used to extend our theoretical understanding of
organizations. Authored by leading researchers in the area of
computational organization theory, the various chapters demonstrate
the value of computational analysis for organizational theory and
advance our understanding of the relationship between
organizational design and performance. This book contains both
theoretical and methodological contributions that enable
organizational theorists to use computational and mathematical
techniques to systematically address the complex relationships that
underlie organizational life. It also presents new -- or sometimes,
renewed -- approaches on how to conduct organizational research
from multiple formal perspectives including: simulation, numerical
analysis, symbolic logic, mathematical modeling, and graph theory.
Commanding and controlling organizations in extreme situations is a
challenging task in military, intelligence, and disaster
management. Such command and control must be quick, effective, and
considerate when dealing with the changing, complex, and risky
conditions of the situation. To enable optimal command and control
under extremes, robust structures and efficient operations are
required of organizations. This work discusses how to design and
conduct virtual experiments on resilient organizational structures
and operational practices using modeling and simulation. The work
illustrates key aspects of robustly networked organizations and
modeled performance of human decision-makers through examples of
naval-air defense, counterterrorism operations, and disaster
responses.
Designing Stress Resistant Organizations demonstrates, in a
persuasive way, how computational organization theory can be
applied to advance the field of management with its successful
integration of theory and practice.
At the theoretical level, the book contains a comprehensive
computational framework called DYCORP, which simulates dynamic and
interactive organizational behaviors by incorporating multiple
factors such as organizational design, task environment, and
stress, and which generates consistent and insightful propositions
on organizational performance.
The book utilizes an organization science based approach to
computational modeling. This approach recognizes the limit of human
cognition as it was outlined by Herbert A. Simon in 1947. The model
strives to focus on the essence of the reality that is most
relevant to the research issue. This approach has been proven to be
more beneficial for us to understand the underlying dynamics of the
phenomenon.
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Intelligence and Security Informatics - IEEE ISI 2008 International Workshops: PAISI, PACCF and SOCO 2008, Taipei, Taiwan, June 17, 2008, Proceedings (Paperback, 2008 ed.)
Christopher C. Yang, Hsinchun Chen, Michael Chau, Kuiyu Chang, Sheau-Dong Lang, …
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R1,543
Discovery Miles 15 430
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book constitutes the refereed proceedings of the three
international workshops PAISI 2008, PACCF 2008, and SOCO 2008, held
as satellite events of the IEEE International Conference on
Intelligence and Security Informatics, ISI 2008, in Taipei, Taiwan,
in June 2008.
The 55 revised full papers presented were carefully reviewed and
selected from the presentations at the workshops. The 21 papers of
the Pacific Asia Workshop on Intelligence and Security Informatics
(PAISI 2008) cover topics such as information retrieval and event
detection, internet security and cybercrime, currency and data
protection, cryptography, image and video analysis, privacy issues,
social networks, modeling and visualization, and network intrusion
detection. The Pacific Asia Workshop on Cybercrime and Computer
Forensics (PACCF 2008) furnishes 10 papers about forensic
information management, forensic technologies, and forensic
principles and tools. The 24 papers of the Workshop on Social
Computing (SOCO 2008) are organized in topical sections on social
web and social information management, social networks and
agent-based modeling, as well as social opinions, e-commerce,
security and privacy considerations.
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High Tide (Paperback)
Anne M Carley, Dorene Fisher; Andrea Fisher Rowland
bundle available
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R537
R462
Discovery Miles 4 620
Save R75 (14%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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