Modeling Organizational Cognition: The Case of Impact Factor
Authored by Davide Secchi, Stephen J Cowley
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.18564/jasss.3628
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://www.comses.net/codebases/5589/releases/1.1.0/
Abstract
This article offers an alternative perspective on organizational
cognition based on e-cognition whereby appeal to systemic cognition
replaces the traditional computational model of the mind that is still
extremely popular in organizational research. It uses information
processing, not to explore inner processes, but as the basis for
pursuing organizational matters. To develop a theory of organizational
cognition, the current work presents an agent-based simulation model
based on the case of how individual perception of scientific value is
affected by and affects organizational intelligence units' (e.g.,
research groups, departmental) framing of the notorious impact factor.
Results show that organizational cognition cannot be described without
an intermediate meso scale - called here social organizing - that both
filters and enables the many kinds of socially enabled perception,
action and behavior that are so characteristic of human cognition.
Tags
Agent-based models
behavior
Altruism
Science
Simulation-models
Tests
Mind
Econometrics
Organizational cognition
Distributed cognition
E-cognition
Impact
factor
Perceived scientific value
Social organizing
Agent-based
simulation modeling
Externalism