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Karl Weick's classic study of “sensemaking” showed that there is much to be learned from a wildland fire. In this tradition, we present an ethnographic tale from the subarctic to introduce the concept of ecological sensemaking—the process used to make ...
William H Cooper
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2019
This chapter outlines the implication of the Re.Cri.Re. analysis of European societies’ cultural milieu for policy-making. It is claimed the strategic need of carrying out policies of cultural development, as intended within the Re.Cri.Re. framework, a policy of cultural development is aimed at two main purposes: on the one hand, to define social ...
Andriola V. +6 more
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This chapter outlines the implication of the Re.Cri.Re. analysis of European societies’ cultural milieu for policy-making. It is claimed the strategic need of carrying out policies of cultural development, as intended within the Re.Cri.Re. framework, a policy of cultural development is aimed at two main purposes: on the one hand, to define social ...
Andriola V. +6 more
openaire +5 more sources
Sensemaking and emotion in organizations
Emotion is a critical but relatively unexplored dimension of sensemaking in organizations. Existing models of sensemaking tend to ignore the role of emotion or portray it as an impediment.
Sally Maitlis +2 more
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Making sense of sensemaking: the critical sensemaking approach
Qualitative Research in Organizations and Management: An International Journal, 2010– The purpose of this paper is to revisit the oft cited but as yet not operationalized Weick's sensemaking framework, in order to provide suggested ways forward. Development of a method based on Weick's sensemaking is suggested as a starting point for a heuristic that takes into account missing elements from his original model while operationalizing ...
Jean Helms Mills +2 more
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Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 2012
We examine the possibility of distributed sensemaking: improving a user's sensemaking by leveraging previous users' work without those users directly collaborating or even knowing one another. We asked users to engage in sensemaking by organizing and annotating web search results into "knowledge maps," either with or without previous users' maps to ...
Kristie J. Fisher +2 more
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We examine the possibility of distributed sensemaking: improving a user's sensemaking by leveraging previous users' work without those users directly collaborating or even knowing one another. We asked users to engage in sensemaking by organizing and annotating web search results into "knowledge maps," either with or without previous users' maps to ...
Kristie J. Fisher +2 more
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CHI '05 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 2005
INTRODUCTION Making sense of the world is a common activity. It happens whenever you confront a new, complex problem. At work, your boss says, “Can you give a presentation next week on how wireless will affect our business?” Or perhaps, you join a new committee, and wonder “Who are these people? Who is in charge? What is our mission? What are we really
George W. Furnas, Daniel M. Russell
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INTRODUCTION Making sense of the world is a common activity. It happens whenever you confront a new, complex problem. At work, your boss says, “Can you give a presentation next week on how wireless will affect our business?” Or perhaps, you join a new committee, and wonder “Who are these people? Who is in charge? What is our mission? What are we really
George W. Furnas, Daniel M. Russell
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CHI '08 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 2008
Daniel M. Russell +4 more
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Daniel M. Russell +4 more
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The cost structure of sensemaking
Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems - CHI '93, 1993Making sense of a body of data is a common activity in any kind of analysis. Sensemaking is the process of searching for a representation and encoding data in that representation to answer task-specific questions. Different operations during sensemaking require different cognitive and external resources. Representations are chosen and changed to reduce
Daniel M. Russell +3 more
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Sources of structure in sensemaking
CHI '05 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems, 2005A critical aspect of sensemaking is finding appropriate representations for information important to a task. As background for the design of future systems to help people in finding such representations, this paper reports a study of where people currently get aspects of structure for their representations Results show that representation construction ...
Yan Qu, George W. Furnas
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