Situating a Measure of Systems Thinking in a Landscape of Psychological Constructs
Abstract
Many of the greatest challenges in society have emerged as a result of humans acting within complex systems without fully understanding how they work. To address this problem, scholars from diverse fields have appealed to systems thinking. To date, a psychological perspective has been conspicuously absent from scholarship on this topic—a gap that the present paper seeks to fill by situating an individual difference measure of systems thinking in relation to well-studied constructs (e.g. holistic and relational thinking) and decision-making tasks in the psychological literature. Results indicate that the measure of systems thinking captures peoples' tendency to represent and reason about complex systems. The paper helps to validate a novel measure of an individual's tendency to engage in systems thinking and to provide a conceptual foundation for the thinking about the psychological underpinning of a systems thinking mindset. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Repository Citation
Thibodeau, Paul H., Cynthia McPherson Frantz, and Mirella L. Stroink. 2016. "Situating a Measure of Systems Thinking in a Landscape of Psychological Constructs." Systems Research and Behavioral Science.
Publisher
Wiley
Publication Date
1-1-2016
Publication Title
Systems Research and Behavioral Science
Department
Psychology
Additional Department
Environmental Studies
Document Type
Article
DOI
https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/sres.2388
Keywords
Systems thinking, Reasoning, Analogy, Mindset, Personality
Language
English
Format
text