Circular changes between focus on perfection versus focus on others

Authors

LEHNER Johannes BORN Eva

Year of publication 2022
Type Appeared in Conference without Proceedings
Citation
Description Each system, each organizational arrangement is necessarily incomplete, each rule implies exemptions, even in a highly abstract realm, such as in mathematics, famously shown by Kurt Gödel. As outlined in the call for this sub-theme, such imperfection gives rise to failures and calls for resilience. In this paper we explore improvisation as the individual, group, or organizational process to cope with imperfection and failure. In particular, we conceptualize improvisation as a circular process moving from a focus on perfection, represented by common practices such as rule following, drill, or goal-oriented behaviour, to a focus on adaptation to others, including listening to others, reacting, and coordinated action, implying the simultaneous abandoning of the search for perfection and replacing the focus on the self. As a first empirical test of our circular process model, we employ an agent-based simulation to compare it with non-circular behaviours.

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