Sciweavers

HICSS
2009
IEEE

Reexamining Threat Rigidity: Implications for Design

13 years 11 months ago
Reexamining Threat Rigidity: Implications for Design
Emergencies today seem larger, more complex, and unique than those of the past. Responding to them requires flexibility and creativity not easily achieved. The threat-rigidity thesis proposed by Staw, Sandelands, and Dutton [23] proposes that response to an environmental threat is often one of constriction of control and restriction of information that results in a rigidity of response that can be maladaptive in a new and/or large crisis. However, there are ways to mitigate maladaptive responses. For example, the principles of High Reliability Organizations and Crew Resource Management can ameliorate rigidity of response. In a synthesis of the theory and empirical results from a number of different areas we show how they fit together to explain some of the observed properties of the threat rigidity syndrome. We propose a model of an individual’s cognitive responses to threat and review system design principles that can support flexible, adaptive responses in crisis.
Linda Plotnick, Murray Turoff, Gerd Van Den Eede
Added 19 May 2010
Updated 19 May 2010
Type Conference
Year 2009
Where HICSS
Authors Linda Plotnick, Murray Turoff, Gerd Van Den Eede
Comments (0)