Advancing Organizational Science With Computational Process Theories

IF 9.1 1区 管理学 Q1 MANAGEMENT
Goran Kuljanin , Michael T. Braun , James A. Grand , Jeffrey D. Olenick , Georgia T. Chao , Steve W.J. Kozlowski
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Organizational scholars commonly refer to organizations as complex systems unfolding as a function of work processes. Consequently, the direct study of work processes necessitates our attention. However, organizational scholars tend not to study work processes directly. Instead, organizational scholars commonly develop theories about relationships among psychological construct phenomena that indirectly reference people’s affective, behavioral, cognitive, and/or social processes as underlying explanations. Specifically, construct-oriented theories summarize processes in operation across actors, time, and contexts, and thus, provide limited insights into how focal phenomena manifest directly as a function of process operations. Construct theories remain one-step removed from articulating sequences of actions and two-steps removed from describing generative mechanisms responsible for observed actions. By “missing the action,” construct theories offer incomplete explanatory accounts and imprecise interventions. We assert that researchers in organizational science can make progress towards addressing these concerns by directing greater attention to developing computational process theories. We begin by presenting a framework for differentiating theories based on their focus (constructs versus processes) and modality (narrative versus computational). We use the framework to contrast narrative construct theories to computational process theories. We then describe key design principles for developing computational process theories and explain those principles using a leadership example. We use simulated data, from the computational process model we develop, to explicitly demonstrate the differences between construct and process thinking. We then discuss how computational process theories advance theory development. We conclude with a discussion of the long-term benefits of computational process theories for organizational science.

用计算过程理论推动组织科学发展
组织学者通常将组织称为复杂的系统,是工作流程的函数。因此,对工作过程的直接研究需要我们关注。然而,组织学者往往不直接研究工作过程。相反,组织学者通常会发展有关心理建构现象之间关系的理论,间接引用人们的情感、行为、认知和/或社会过程作为基本解释。具体来说,以建构为导向的理论概括了跨行动者、跨时间和跨情境的运作过程,因此,对于焦点现象如何直接表现为过程运作的功能,所提供的见解十分有限。建构理论离阐明行动序列还差一步,离描述观察到的行动的生成机制还差两步。由于 "错过了行动",构造理论提供的解释性说明并不完整,干预措施也不精确。我们认为,组织科学研究人员可以通过更加关注计算过程理论的发展,在解决这些问题方面取得进展。首先,我们将根据理论的重点(建构与过程)和模式(叙事与计算)提出一个区分理论的框架。我们利用该框架将叙事建构理论与计算过程理论进行对比。然后,我们描述了开发计算过程理论的关键设计原则,并通过一个领导力实例解释了这些原则。我们使用我们开发的计算过程模型中的模拟数据来明确展示建构思维和过程思维之间的差异。然后,我们将讨论计算过程理论如何推动理论发展。最后,我们将讨论计算过程理论对组织科学的长期益处。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
15.20
自引率
9.30%
发文量
58
期刊介绍: The Leadership Quarterly is a social-science journal dedicated to advancing our understanding of leadership as a phenomenon, how to study it, as well as its practical implications. Leadership Quarterly seeks contributions from various disciplinary perspectives, including psychology broadly defined (i.e., industrial-organizational, social, evolutionary, biological, differential), management (i.e., organizational behavior, strategy, organizational theory), political science, sociology, economics (i.e., personnel, behavioral, labor), anthropology, history, and methodology.Equally desirable are contributions from multidisciplinary perspectives.
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