1st Edition

Theories of Team Cognition Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives

Edited By Eduardo Salas, Stephen M. Fiore, Michael P. Letsky Copyright 2012
    664 Pages
    by Routledge

    664 Pages
    by Routledge

    Cognitive processes in teams have been a valuable arena for team researchers to explore. Team cognition research advances and informs a variety of disciplines, including cognitive and social sciences, engineering, military science, organizational science, human factors, medicine, and communications. There has been a great deal of progress in the team cognition literature, yet the field is still in its early stages of maturity. There is much more to be gained from the field’s insights and there is a need to unite the diverse array of scholarly ideas that permeate the field. This movement will serve to organize the research and ideas that have surfaced in the field, thereby making them more accessible to different disciplines while at the same time, motivating continued progress in the field. This book aims to be a step in this direction and acts as a forum for leading scholars to share their ideas, theories, models, and conceptions about what matters and where more attention is needed in the field of team cognition.

    Series Foreword  J. N. Cleveland, K. R. Murphy, Why Cross-Disciplinary Theories of Team Cognition? Part 1. Team Cognition as a Field E. Salas, S. M. Fiore, M. Letsky, Why Cross-Disciplinary Thoeries of Team Cognition? S. H. J. Kozlowski, G. T. Chao, Macro Cognition, Team Learning, and Team Knowledge: Origins, Emergence, and Measurement. Part 2. Organizational Behavior Perspectives E. Santos, Jr., J. Rosen, K. Joo Kim, F. Yu, D. Li, Y. Guo, E. Jacob, S. Shih, J. Liu, L. Katona, Reasoning About Intentions in Complex Organizational Behaviors - Intentions in Surgical Handoffs. S. Mohammed, R. Tesler, K. Hamilton, Time and Team Cognition: Towards Greater Integration of Temporal Dynamics. T. Murase, C. J. Resick, M. Jimenez, E. Sanz, L. A. DeChurch, Leadership and Emergent Collective Cognition. J. R. Rentsch, I. Mot, Elaborating Cognition in Teams: Cognitive Similarity Configurations. Part 3. Human Factors and Cognitive Engineering Perspectives E. S. Patterson, R. Stephens, A Cognitive Systems Engineering Perspective on Shared Cognition: Coping with Complexity. N. J. Cooke, J. C. Gorman, C. Meyers, J. Duran, Theoretical Underpinning of Interactive Team Cognition. J. M. Carroll, M. Borge, C. Ganoe, M. B. Rosson, Articulating Collaborative Contributions to Activity Awareness. Part 4. Cognitive and Computer Science Perspectives V. B. Hinsz, J. L. Ladbury, Combinations of Contributions for Sharing Cognitions in Teams. R. Lyons, H. Lum, S. M. Fiore, E. Salas, N. Warner, M. Letsky, Considering the Influence of Task Complexity on Macrocognitive Team Processes. J. A. Espinosa, M. A. Clark, Team Knowledge: Dimensional Structure and Network Representation. G. Sukthankar, R. Shumaker, M. Lewis, Intelligent Agents as Teammates. M. D. McNeese, M. S. Pfaff, Looking at Macrocognition through a Multi-methodological Lens. J. L. Ladbury, V. B. Hinsz, Gaining Insight into Team Processes on Cognitive Tasks with Member Expectations and the Social Relations Model. Part 5. Social Psychology, Communication and Developmental Perspectives T. Koschmann, G. Dunnington, M. Kim, Team Cognition and the Accountabilities of the Tool Pass. A. B. Hollingshead, N. Gupta, K. Yoon, D. P. Brandon, Transactive Memory Theory and Teams: Past, Present and Future. M. S. Poole, Team Cognition, Communication, and Sharing. S. J. Beck, J. Keyton, Team Cognition, Communication, and Message Interdependence. P. Musaeus, Team Reason: Between Team Cognition and Societal Knowledge. G. Stahl, C. Penstein Rose,  Group Cognition in Online Teams. S. A. McComb, D. M. Kennedy, Facilitating Effective Mental Model Convergence: The Interplay Among the Team’s Task, Mental Model Content, Communication Flow, and Media. Part 6. The Road Ahead J. Elias, S. M. Fiore, Commentary on the Coordinates of Coordination and Collaboration. O. C. Riches, E. Salas, Some More Reflections on Team Cognition.

    Biography

    Eduardo Salas is University Trustee Chair and Pegasus Professor of Psychology at the University of Central Florida (UCF) and program director for the Human Systems Integration Research Department at UCF’s Institute for Simulation and Training. Salas is a Fellow of the American Psychological Association (SIOP and Divisions 19, 21, and 49), the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, and the Association for Psychological Science. He was editor of Human Factors in 2000–2004. For 15 years, he was a senior research psychologist and head of the Training Technology Development Branch of NAVAIR-Orlando. Salas served as a principal investigator for numerous R&D programs focusing on teamwork, team training, simulation-based training, decision-making under stress, learning methodologies, and performance assessment. He helps organizations foster teamwork, design and implement team training strategies, facilitate training effectiveness, manage decision-making under stress, develop performance measurement tools, and design learning and simulation-based environments. Salas has coauthored more than 330 journal articles and book chapters and has co edited 20 books. He has served as an editorial board member for numerous journals and is an associate editor of the Journal of Applied Psychology. He received a Ph.D. in industrial and organizational psychology from Old Dominion University in 1984.

    Stephen M. Fiore, PhD is faculty with the University of Central Florida’s Cognitive Sciences Program in the Department of Philosophy and Director of the Cognitive Sciences Laboratory at UCF’s Institute for Simulation and Training. He earned his Ph.D. degree in Cognitive Psychology from the University of Pittsburgh, Learning Research and Development Center. He maintains a multidisciplinary research interest that incorporates aspects of the cognitive, social, and computational sciences in the investigation of learning and performance in individuals and teams. He is co-Editor of recent volumes on Macrocognition in Teams (2008), Distributed Learning (2007), Team Cognition (2004), and he has co-authored over 100 scholarly publications in the area of learning, memory, and problem solving at the individual and the group level. As Principal Investigator and Co-Principal Investigator he has helped to secure and manage approximately $15 Million in research funding from organizations such as the National Science Foundation, the Office of Naval Research, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, and the Department of Homeland Security.

    Dr. Michael P. Letsky is currently Program Officer for the Collaboration and Knowledge Interoperability Program at the Office of Naval Research (ONR) in Arlington Virginia. He manages a research program of academic grants and innovative small business projects seeking to understand team cognition and team performance. He previously worked for the Army Research Institute of the Behavioral and Social Sciences where he developed their long range strategic research plan and also served on the Army Science Board on Highly Maneuverable Forces. Dr. Letsky's education includes a B.S. in Electrical Engineering (Northeastern University), an MBA and DBA in Operations Research (George Washington University).

     'A 'must-read' for anyone who wants to keep up with the rapidly changing study of team cognition.' - Gary Klein, author of Streetlights and Shadows: Searching for the keys to adaptive decision making.

    'Team building, problem solving in teams, and their maintenance and evaluation are an essential part of leadership at higher levels of organizations. This book fits into the need for providing more research and scientific linkages to this applied problem in a wide range of settings.' - Edwin Fleishman, George Mason University, USA

    'The ideas which will be considered new and unique include the dual focus on macro and team cognition from a range of cross-disciplinary perspectives.' - C. Shawn Burke, University of Central Florida, USA

    'This book tackles a daunting set of problems, including the measurement and definition of team knowledge, the assessment of team members’ intentions and decision making processes, developing an understanding the role of time pressure in team decision making and performance, explicating the links between leadership and team cognition, modeling shared knowledge and cognitive similarity, developing of technologies to facilitate collaboration, using team tasks to test and expand models of shared cognition, and developing a better understanding of the demands different types of tasks place on teams.' - From the Series foreword by Kevin Murphy and Jeanette Cleveland