Decision Making: (Extracted From The Book "Airmanship")
Decision Making: (Extracted From The Book "Airmanship")
Decision Making: (Extracted From The Book "Airmanship")
Decision Making
(Extracted from the book "Airmanship")
Information collection
In all the processes the correct information
must be used whether this is done
consciously or unconsciously. Using
communications, situation awareness and
techniques for minimising fatigue or other
physiological effects will ensure that the
correct information is obtained.
Decision making constants (3/6)
Judgment
At various stages in all the decision making processes
a person is making an assessment of the information
they have and estimating the outcome. In other
words, they will have to use their basic judgment of
the facts in front of them. It is not unusual for people
of equal intellect and experience, using the same
decision making process, to come to opposite
conclusions. It is why we can never know who will win
the 3.30 race at Ascot, or who will be elected, or
what the stock market will do next week.
Decision making constants (4/6)
Risk
Similarly people with the same information,
decision making process and even judgment
can often have a different attitude towards
risk. In other words, I might agree with my
friend that 5-1 are the correct odds for the
horse, but still feel the best decision would be
not to invest my 10 JOD.
Decision making constants (5/6)
Review
All decisions should be subject to continual
review and of course further decision making
if necessary.
Decision making constants (6/6)
Experience
This is always going to have an influence on the way we
make decisions and it is an area that is not easily
understood. Experience is the sum total of everything we
have seen, heard, smelled, tasted or felt, and thus it is a
massive database of information. There are theories that
all this information is still in our heads, somewhere,
because unlike computers we do not have a delete
function or the ability to reformat the brain. The problem
that most of us have is trying to remember which file the
information is stored in, and how we can retrieve it when
needed. Nevertheless, experience assists us in strange
ways, as we are able to make sound decisions with no
more guidance than a feeling we have. Yet sometimes as
Group decision making (1/4)
It is often easier to make decisions on your
own rather than having to agree with
someone else, but joint decision making is a
skill that crews must develop.