Abstract
This is a comparative case study of two public building projects.
This research studies projects as distributed cognitive actions. Distributed cognition studies human cognition as a shared activity, not as a property of a single individual. In distributed cognition several agents share cognitive resources of symbolic knowledge, plans, and goals, to accomplish something that one agent could not achieve alone. Many concepts of distributed cognition can be applied to studies of project management: transactive memory, communities of practice, social networks, weak links, and knowledge brokers, to mention only a few.
The aim of this study was to find out whether the problems of project knowledge management could be explained by using the distributive cognitive approach and how project success factors could be better understood and described by studying projects as distributed cognitive actions. For this aim a method was created where analysis was based on qualitative, retrospective interviews of the project participants and on the documents produced. There were three research questions:
What do the documents and other artifacts produced tell about the collective activity which produced them? How can the changes during the two projects be described as dynamism of the social network? What were the factors behind the projects' success or failure?
The research was build around two different studies. The first study was a case study of a school renovation. There were qualitative interviews (N=15) and documents (N=534). The second study was a case study of a service centre renovation project using qualitative interviews (N=21) and documents (N=2367). The projects were studied phase by phase and the network links in each phase described.
It was found that the projects can be studied as distributed cognitive systems. The main findings were:
There was a direct relation between the quality of distributed cognitive action and project success or failure. The quality of the artifacts and the way they were used was essential to project success. The quality of network action was an essential prerequisite for project success. For the first time projects were described as distributed cognitive actions in a way which explained the project success and failure.
Translated title of the contribution | Projektit hajautettuina kognitiivisina toimintoina. Kahden julkisen rakennushankkeen tutkimus |
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Original language | English |
Qualification | Doctor's degree |
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Publication status | Published - 2007 |
MoE publication type | G4 Doctoral dissertation (monograph) |
Keywords
- social networks
- project success factors
- distributed cognition
- knowledge management