Page - 78 - in Applied Interdisciplinary Theory in Health Informatics - Knowledge Base for Practitioners
Image of the Page - 78 -
Text of the Page - 78 -
Each of these models has associated principles extracted from the literature on
distributed cognition [10]. Table 1 shows how some of these are applied. These
distributed cognition principles have been shown to help analysts gain further insight
into complex sociotechnical systems compared to contextual design alone [14]. These
principles should not be seen as a comprehensive and prescriptive check list of
distributed cognition features, but as a set of sensitizing concepts to enrich what can be
seen and described – some are likely to be relevant in a given context and some will not
be. This approach has been applied in different contexts by our group and others (e.g.
[15, 16]).
DiCoT-CL is an extension of DiCoT, which adds ‘concentric layers’ to each of the
models to encourage the analyst to think about micro, meso and macro layers of
distributed cognition [17]. DiCoT-CL has been applied to evaluate the design and use of
a blood glucose meter on a ward [17] and to investigate the safety around infusion
practices on a ward [18]. In both cases we treat the micro as the layer that is closest to
the interactions to do with the device, procedure or technology under study, e.g. by the
bedside; the meso is the layer out from this which might include different professionals
as a team, e.g. at the scale of the ward; and macro is the layer that might be as broad as
the hospital or above, e.g. national guidance. These different layers have been effective
in showing that determinants for success and failure in a system might not be proximate
to technology use but might be further away in space and time. For example, the
configuration of infusion pump alarms in the hospital layer had downstream
consequences for staff and patients in the micro layer [18].
Figure 1. DiCoT-CL framework has three concentric layers of the sociotechnical
system, where each layer is divided into five areas that reflect the themes of the
different DiCoT models, i.e. information flow, artefact, physical, social and
evolutionary models (adapted from [17]). Reproduced with permission.
D.Furniss etal. /DistributedCognition:UnderstandingComplexSociotechnical
Informatics78
back to the
book Applied Interdisciplinary Theory in Health Informatics - Knowledge Base for Practitioners"
Applied Interdisciplinary Theory in Health Informatics
Knowledge Base for Practitioners
- Title
- Applied Interdisciplinary Theory in Health Informatics
- Subtitle
- Knowledge Base for Practitioners
- Authors
- Philip Scott
- Nicolette de Keizer
- Andrew Georgiou
- Publisher
- IOS Press BV
- Location
- Amsterdam
- Date
- 2019
- Language
- English
- License
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-1-61499-991-1
- Size
- 16.0 x 24.0 cm
- Pages
- 242
- Category
- Informatik