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Book Cover
E-book
Author Kmetz, John L., author

Title The information processing theory of organization : managing technology accession in complex systems / John L. Kmetz
Published Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2018

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Description 1 online resource
Series Routledge revivals
Routledge revivals.
Contents Cover; Half Title; Dedication; Title; Copyright; Contents; List of Figures; List of Tables; Acknowledgments; List of Abbreviations; Foreword; 1 Foundations of IPT: the Information Processing Theory of Organization; Appendix 1.1 A Brief Review of the Payoff Matrix; Appendix 1.2 Social Science Methodology, Statistical Significance Testing, and the Use of Organizational Research in This Book; 2 Avionics Maintenance and Technology Accession; Appendix 2.1 VAST-Supported Aircraft; 3 VAST and Avionics Maintenance; Appendix 3.1 VAST Building Blocks; Appendix 3.2 Work Center Codes
Appendix 3.3 Beyond Capability of Maintenance (BCM) CodesAppendix 3.4 Malfunction Description Codes; 4 The VAST Shop Effectiveness and Efficiency Studies; Appendix 4.1 AIMD Workflow Problems; 5 Coping with Complexity in the Avionics Maintenance System; 6 ""Experiment 2""-IP Capacity, Organization Performance, and Organization Slack; 7 New Technologies and ""Experiment 3; 8 Extending IPT, ATE Lessons, and a Technology Accession Model; Appendix 8.1 Workflow Analysis; Index
Summary This volume develops and tests an information-processing model of organization, within the context of the accession of a new generation of a production technology. The model conceptualizes organizations as systems which accomplish their objectives through the processing of information. The book begins with the conceptual basis of the theory, developing the fundamental concepts of information, information processing, and technology. The accession of an automatic avionics tester during the 1970's and 1980's is the change in production technology used to test the theory. The theory is tested by mapping and analysing performance with a three-wave longitudinal field experiment and objective performance measures in the workflow of a very complex system, the U.S. Navy's avionics maintenance organization. The information processing capacity of the system is shown to be the primary determinant of system performance, with or without the use of information technology. Additional support for the theory comes from newer test and information technologies deployed in the 1980's and 1990's. Implications of this theory for current generations of test technology are provided in the final chapters, along with further development of the theory and its general application to many types of organizations
Notes Originally published 1998 by Ashgate Publishing
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed December 19, 2018)
Subject Communication in organizations.
Organization.
Technology -- Management
Airplanes, Military -- Testing
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Industrial Management.
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Management.
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Management Science.
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS -- Organizational Behavior.
Airplanes, Military -- Testing
Communication in organizations
Organization
Technology -- Management
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780429433054
0429433050