loading
Papers Papers/2022 Papers Papers/2022

Research.Publish.Connect.

Paper

Paper Unlock

Authors: Lawrence John 1 ; Patricia M. McCormick 2 ; Tom McCormick 2 ; Greg McNeill 3 and John Boardman 4

Affiliations: 1 Analytic Services and Inc., United States ; 2 Alpha Informatics and Ltd., United States ; 3 ExoAnalytic Solutions and Inc, United States ; 4 Stevens Insitute of Technology, United States

Keyword(s): System of Systems, Extended Enterprise, Game Theory, Prisoner’s Dilemma, Stag Hunt, Agent-based Modelling, Complex Dynamical Systems, Institutional Analysis, Organizational Norms, Organizational Behaviour, Systems Thinking.

Related Ontology Subjects/Areas/Topics: Artificial Intelligence ; Communication, Collaboration and Information Sharing ; Knowledge Management and Information Sharing ; Knowledge-Based Systems ; Symbolic Systems

Abstract: An extended enterprise is both a system of systems (SoS) and a complex dynamical system. We characterize government-run joint and interagency efforts as “government extended enterprises” (GEEs) comprising sets of effectively autonomous organizations that must cooperate voluntarily to achieve desired GEE-level outcomes. Our research investigates the proposition that decision makers can leverage four “canonical forces” to raise the levels of both internal GEE cooperation and SoS-level operational effectiveness, changing the GEE's status as indicated by the "SoS differentiating characteristics" detailed by Boardman and Sauser. Two prior papers described the concepts involved, postulated the relationships among them, and discussed the n-player, iterated "Stag Hunt" methodology applied to execute a real proof-of-concept case (the U.S. Counterterrorism Enterprise's response to the Christmas Day Bomber) in an agent-based model. This paper presents preliminary conclusions from data analysis conducted as a result of ongoing testing of the simulation. (More)

CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

Sign In Guest: Register as new SciTePress user now for free.

Sign In SciTePress user: please login.

PDF ImageMy Papers

You are not signed in, therefore limits apply to your IP address 18.227.190.93

In the current month:
Recent papers: 100 available of 100 total
2+ years older papers: 200 available of 200 total

Paper citation in several formats:
John, L.; M. McCormick, P.; McCormick, T.; McNeill, G. and Boardman, J. (2011). IMPACT OF BEHAVIORAL FORCES ON KNOWLEDGE SHARING IN AN EXTENDED ENTERPRISE SYSTEM OF SYSTEMS. In Proceedings of the International Conference on Knowledge Management and Information Sharing (IC3K 2011) - KMIS; ISBN 978-989-8425-81-2; ISSN 2184-3228, SciTePress, pages 67-76. DOI: 10.5220/0003655900670076

@conference{kmis11,
author={Lawrence John. and Patricia {M. McCormick}. and Tom McCormick. and Greg McNeill. and John Boardman.},
title={IMPACT OF BEHAVIORAL FORCES ON KNOWLEDGE SHARING IN AN EXTENDED ENTERPRISE SYSTEM OF SYSTEMS},
booktitle={Proceedings of the International Conference on Knowledge Management and Information Sharing (IC3K 2011) - KMIS},
year={2011},
pages={67-76},
publisher={SciTePress},
organization={INSTICC},
doi={10.5220/0003655900670076},
isbn={978-989-8425-81-2},
issn={2184-3228},
}

TY - CONF

JO - Proceedings of the International Conference on Knowledge Management and Information Sharing (IC3K 2011) - KMIS
TI - IMPACT OF BEHAVIORAL FORCES ON KNOWLEDGE SHARING IN AN EXTENDED ENTERPRISE SYSTEM OF SYSTEMS
SN - 978-989-8425-81-2
IS - 2184-3228
AU - John, L.
AU - M. McCormick, P.
AU - McCormick, T.
AU - McNeill, G.
AU - Boardman, J.
PY - 2011
SP - 67
EP - 76
DO - 10.5220/0003655900670076
PB - SciTePress