Close

Username :
Password :
 
BizBridges Home / BizBridges /
Biz Classifieds
Ideas and Opportunities
Starting Up
Self-Employment
Finance
Marketing
HR
Management/ Strategy
Outsourcing/ Operations
Regulatory
Technology
Franchising
Share your biz problem
Management/ Strategy
The SHOR Paradigm [Decision Management] By Vikram Karve
Author :Vikram Karve
Institute :
Posting Date :20/10/08
    email a friend
Click Here to login and post message
Rate this article:

The author talks about a Decision Making model which could help us structure our decision making process better.
          "The man who insists upon seeing with perfect clearness before he decides, never decides" .Frederic Amiel

Decision-making is so pervasive that everyone, professionally or personally, is involved with making a variety of decisions. In today's fast-moving world, the timing of a decision is of paramount importance in many decision-making situations. In real life even the "perfect" decision may not be optimal if it is made too late. Information is a vital resource in decision-making. One of the most important characteristics of successful managers is the ability to make the correct decision when confronted with imperfect or insufficient information (i.e.) Decision-making under conditions of uncertainty.

In the context of decision-processing, two realms or domains of uncertainty are:
1. Information Input Uncertainty which creates the need for hypothesis generation and evaluation;
2. Consequence-of-Action Uncertainty which creates the need for option generation and evaluation.

THE SHOR PARADIGM
A decision taxonomy: The Stimulus - Hypothesis - Options - Response (SHOR) paradigm, formulated by Wohl, is useful in such decision situations.

The SHOR paradigm represents a qualitative, descriptive, model as distinct from a quantitative, predictive model, and comprises three primary decision-making task elements:
S: Stimulus Input Data Processing
H: Hypothesis Generation, Hypothesis Evaluation, Information Processing [What is?]
O: Option Generation, Option Evaluation, Decision-Making [What if?]
R: Response Output Action

The SHOR paradigm is basically an extension of the classical Stimulus - Response (SR) Paradigm of behaviourist psychology. The SHOR paradigm provides explicitly for the necessity to deal with information input uncertainty and consequence-of-action uncertainty, and helps us understand some of the peculiar human factors that affect the quality of the decision-making and answering questions such as: What makes some decision-makers perform better than others, especially in placing high-value assets at risk, in business? What are the sources and dimensions of "poor" performance?

HUMAN ERRORS IN DECISION-MAKING Based on the SHOR Model, human errors in decision-making appear to lie in four domains:
(S) Stimulus: "I didn't know."
(H) Hypothesis: "I didn't understand."
(O) Options: "I didn't consider."
(R) Response: "I didn't act."

Stimulus based errors of the type "I didn't know." result from lack or inadequacy of information, the true inability to obtain information. "I didn't understand." is the fundamental result of information input uncertainty, while "I didn't consider." is the product of consequence-of-action uncertainty. It is possible to have accessed all significant information, to have developed the correct hypothesis and to have selected the best option and yet fail to take appropriate action.

The two possible reasons for the "I didn't act." type of response error are:
1. Paralysis: This is a complete failure to act, the pathological 'observation of an inevitable course' without intervention. It is caused by an over-riding emotional struggle in which some internal factor is being placed in conflict with the course of action selected by the decision-maker. The final scene in the evergreen classic film The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957) exemplifies such a situation.
2. Misjudgement: The decision-maker correctly decides what to do but errs in either or both of the two dimensions - how [the specifics of the action] or when [the timing of the action]. Prediction of the critical consequences of inaction may be of some help in dealing with paralysis whilst the ability to perform sensitivity analyses may assist in alleviating misjudgement. Any Decision-Maker [and designers of decision aids] must address the four cardinal types of errors epitomized by the SHOR paradigm: "I didn't know.", "I didn't understand.", "I didn't consider." and "I didn't act."

DECISION-MAKING IN UNCERTAINTY

In the context of decision-making in uncertainty, the conflict theory paradigm developed by Janis and Mann may be apt. This paradigm postulates five patterns of coping behaviour which tends to occur in such situations:
1. Unconflicted Adherence in which the uncertain, or risk, information is ignored and the decision-maker complacently decides to continue whatever he has been doing.
2. Unconflicted Change to a new course of action, where the decision-maker uncritically adopts whichever new course of action is most salient, obvious or strongly recommended.
3. Defensive Avoidance in which the decision-maker evades conflict by procrastinating, shifting responsibility to someone else, or constructing wishful rationalisations and remaining selectively inattentive to corrective information.
4. Hypervigilance wherein the decision-maker searches frantically for a way out of the dilemma and impulsively seizes upon a hastily contrived solution that seems to promise immediate relief, overlooking the full range of consequences of his choice because of emotional excitement, repetitive thinking and cognitive constriction. In its most extreme form hypervigilance is referred to as "panic".
5. Concerned Vigilance in which the decision-maker optimally processes pertinent information, generates and evaluates hypotheses and options before selecting a response as characterised by the SHOR paradigm.

In many real-life situations a decision-maker cannot always keep waiting until the entire information-input and consequence-of-action conditions are known a priori with certainty. In most cases there is no such thing as "perfect" certainty. If a single most important characteristic is crucial to a decision-maker in any field, it is the ability to make optimal decisions in conditions of uncertainty. Qualitative descriptive models like the SHOR paradigm may prove useful in such situations.

To quote Frederic Amiel once again: "The man who insists upon seeing with perfect clearness before he decides, never decides".

VIKRAM KARVE
Copyright © Vikram Karve 2008. Vikram Karve has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the author of this work.

vikramkarve@sify.com
vikramkarve@hotmail.com
http://www.linkedin.com/in/karve
http://vikramkarve.sulekha.com
http://www.ryze.com/go/karve
,
Rate this article:
Archives
  Corporate Leadership Lessons from World Cup Cricket 2011
  Business Ethics How to Resolve Ethical Dilemma: A Case Study CATWOE Analysis
  Management Lessons from World Cup 2010
  Running Half-Marathons: A Personal Management Class on the Roads
  Yes, Managers Can: Management Lessons from Obama’s Presidential Campaign
  Lessons from Beijing Olympics: Managing for Preparation and Performance
  Book Review: The Post American World by Fareed Zakaria
  Book Review of Small Giants - Companies that choose to be great instead of big
  Management Lessons from the recent IPL T20 Cricket Tournament
  Chai and Chat with Rajnish Karki, author of the recently released book - Competing with the Best: Strategic Management of Indian Companies in a Globalizing Arena
  Whats Your War Cry? - Leadership Lessons from the Military
  Implementation Management
  Leadership and its Different Styles
  A Perspective on Competition in the Indian IT Industry
  Chess Teaches Strategy
  Book Review - The 80/20 Principle: The Secret of Achieving More with Less by Richard Koch
  My favorite military autobiography (A Soldier’s Story by Omar N. Bradley)
  Book Review - Management of the Absurd
  Management Lessons from World Cup Football
  “GROUPTHINK” by Vikram Karve

 Click Here to login and post message

Indian Alumni and Students from the following Indian and Global Institutes are invited to be members of 6bridges.com:
 
India
Business & Accounting Institutes : FMS, ICAI, IIFT, IIM(A), IIM(B), IIM(C), IIM(I), IIM(K), IIM(L), IRMA(Anand), ISB, JBIMS, MDI(Gurgaon), NITIE, NMIMS, SJMSOM(IIT Bombay), SPJIMR, TISS, XIMB, XLRI
Technology Institutes : BIT(Mesra), BITS(Pilani), COE-Guindy(Anna Univ.), DCE, IISc, IIT(B), IIT(M), IIT(D), IIT(G), IIT(K), IIT(Kgp),IIT(Roorkee), ISI(Kolkatta), ISM (Dhanbad), IT-BHU, Jadavpur Univ., National Institutes of Technology(RECs), PSG(Coimbatore), RVCE(Bangalore), VJTI
 
Global
Business, Technology & Accounting Universities/Institutes : AGSM(Sydney), AIM(Manila), Caltech, Carnegie Mellon, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Duke, Georgia Tech, Harvard, ICAEW(UK), IMD(Switzerland), INSEAD, Judge(Cambridge), London Business School, Manchester, Melbourne Business School, Michigan, MIT, Northwestern, NYU, Princeton, Purdue, Queen's(Canada), Said(Oxford), Stanford, U.Chicago, U.Penn, UC Berkeley, UCLA, Univ. of Illinois-Urbana, Univ. of Southern California, Univ. of Virginia, Warwick, Yale

Home / Contact Us / CareersDesk / CollegeGates / BizBridges / WealthDesk / BesidesWork / MyBridges
About Us / Terms and Conditions & Privacy Policy / Site Map


Disclaimer: 6bridges.com and its affiliates (‘6bridges.com’), do not necessarily endorse the views and opinions voiced on any of these forums, and cannot be held responsible for the content of sites linked from these pages. The opinions expressed under these pages are those of the people who post them and in no way constitutes those of 6bridges.com. 6bridges.com makes no representation, warranty or guarantee as to the accuracy or completeness of the information provided through its service. In no event shall 6bridges.com be liable to any person for any decision made or action taken in reliance upon the information provided herein.