Managerial intuition and the development of executive support systems

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Managerial intuition is a well-recognized cognitive ability but still poorly understood for the purpose of developing effective Executive Support Systems (ESS). This paper reviews research on cognition involved in intuition. The review shows that, in everyday decision making, executives are not passive choice makers but are active sensemakers who rely on perception, action, and imaginistic reasoning to arrive at solutions to problems. The combination of these cognitive resources appears to be seamless. Furthermore, the knowledge needed for problem solving is distributed between the manager's mind and the surrounding world. As a result, managers' intuition can be effective in handling dynamic, ill-structured problem situations. To develop an ESS that fits this perception–action ecology of the manager's life in a hectic world, we must go beyond the emphasis of the tasks' functionalities. The author proposes an ecological model of managerial intuition and recommends methodologies that focus the analysis on the interplay between the manager and their environment. He also suggests guidelines to improve the ESS development such that the powerful intuition of managers and the analytic capability of the computer may be combined.

论文关键词:Managerial intuition,Executive support systems,Decision support systems,Ecological psychology,Situated cognition,Distributed cognition,Perception,Action,Mental model,Socially constructed knowledge

论文评审过程:Accepted 3 September 1998, Available online 4 January 1999.

论文官网地址:https://doi.org/10.1016/S0167-9236(98)00056-6