Expert Decision Makers

January 30, 2010 by Eric Shaver · 1 Comment
Filed under: decision making, experts 

Have you ever wondered what separates expert decision makers from average ones?  Rosen, Salas, Lyons, and Fiore (2008) have developed a list of mechanisms that characterize expert decision making.  They include (p. 216):

  1. Are tightly coupled to cues and contextual features of the environment.
    • They develop psychological and physiological adaptations to the task environment.
    • They are sensitive to and leverage contextual patterns of cues in decision making.
  2. Have a larger knowledge base and organize it differently from non-experts.
    • They have a more conceptually organized knowledge base.
    • They have more robust connections between aspects of their knowledge.
    • They have a more abstracted and functional knowledge base.
  3. Engage in pattern recognition.
    • They perceive larger and more meaningful patterns in the environment.
    • They are able to detect subtle cue configurations.
    • They are able to retrieve courses of action based on situation/action matching rules.
  4. Engage in deliberate and guided practice.
    • They devote time and effort to improving knowledge and skills.
    • They have high motivation to learn and long term learning goals.
  5. Seek diagnostic feedback.
    • They seek out input from other experts.
    • They self-diagnose their performance, indentify weaknesses in their knowledge and processes, and correct them.
  6. Have better situation assessment and problem representations.
    • They spend more time evaluating the situation.
    • They create deeper, more conceptual, more functional, and more abstracted situation representations.
  7. Have specialized memory skills.
    • They functionally increase their ability to handle large amounts of information.
    • They anticipate what information will be needed in the decision making.
  8. Automate the small skills.
    • They quickly and effortlessly do what requires large amounts of attention for non-experts.
    • They have more cognitive resources available for dealing with more complex aspects of decision making.
  9. Self-regulate and monitor their progress.
    • They evaluate their own understanding of a situation.
    • They judge the consistency, reliability, and completeness of their information.
    • They make good decisions about when to stop evaluating the situation.

References

Rosen, M.A., Salas, E., Lyons, R., & Fiore, S.M. (2008).  Expertise and naturalistic decision making in organizations: Mechanisms of effective decision making.  In G.P. Hodgkinson & W.H. Starbuck (Eds.), The oxford handbook of organizational decision making (pp. 211-230).  New York: Oxford University Press.

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