Fundamental Economic Principles, Methods, and Tools for Addressing Human Systems Integration Issues and Tradeoffs
Human Systems Integration (HSI) is a new and fundamental integrating discipline designed to help move business and engineering cultures toward more human-centered systems. Integrating consideration of human abilities, limitations, and preferences into engineering systems yields important cost and performance benefits that otherwise would not have been accomplished. In order for this new discipline to be effective, however, a cultural change―starting with organizational leadership―is often necessary.
The Economics of Human Systems Integration explains the difficulties underlying valuation of investments in people's training and education, safety and health, and work productivity. It provides an overview of how the field of economics addresses these difficulties, focusing on human issues associated with design, development, production, operations, maintenance, and sustainment of complex systems.
The set of thought leaders recruited as contributors to this volume collectively provides a compelling set of data and principles for assessing the economic value of investing in people, not just in general but in specific investment situations. The early chapters provide the contexts for HSI and investment analysis, illustrating the enormous difference context makes in how issues are best framed and analyzed. A host of practical methods and tools for investment valuation are then presented. Provided are:
A variety of real-world applications of economic analysis ranging from military acquisition and automotive investment to healthcare and high-tech investments in general, in both the U.S. and abroad
A range of economics-based methods and tools for cost analysis, cost-benefit analysis, and investment analysis, as well as sources of data for performing such analyses
Differing perspectives on economic decision-making, including a range of private sector points of view, as well as government and regulatory perspectives
In addition, five real-world case studies illustrate how such valuations have been done and their major impacts on investment decisions. HSI professionals, systems engineers, and finance professionals who address investment analysis will appreciate the wide range of methods and real-life applications; senior undergraduates and masters-level graduate students will find this to be an excellent textbook that provides theory and supports practice.
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William B. Rouse is Executive Director of the Tennenbaum Institute at the Georgia Institute of Technology. He is also a professor in the College of Computing and School of Industrial and Systems Engineering. Rouse's earlier positions include chair of the School of Industrial and Systems Engineering, CEO of two innovative software companies―Enterprise Support Systems and Search Technology―and faculty positions at Georgia Tech, University of Illinois, Delft University of Technology, and Tufts University.
Fundamental Economic Principles, Methods, and Tools for Addressing Human Systems Integration Issues and Tradeoffs
Human Systems Integration (HSI) is a new and fundamental integrating discipline designed to help move business and engineering cultures toward more human-centered systems. Integrating consideration of human abilities, limitations, and preferences into engineering systems yields important cost and performance benefits that otherwise would not have been accomplished. In order for this new discipline to be effective, however, a cultural change―starting with organizational leadership―is often necessary.
The Economics of Human Systems Integration explains the difficulties underlying valuation of investments in people's training and education, safety and health, and work productivity. It provides an overview of how the field of economics addresses these difficulties, focusing on human issues associated with design, development, production, operations, maintenance, and sustainment of complex systems.
The set of thought leaders recruited as contributors to this volume collectively provides a compelling set of data and principles for assessing the economic value of investing in people, not just in general but in specific investment situations. The early chapters provide the contexts for HSI and investment analysis, illustrating the enormous difference context makes in how issues are best framed and analyzed. A host of practical methods and tools for investment valuation are then presented. Provided are:
A variety of real-world applications of economic analysis ranging from military acquisition and automotive investment to healthcare and high-tech investments in general, in both the U.S. and abroad
A range of economics-based methods and tools for cost analysis, cost-benefit analysis, and investment analysis, as well as sources of data for performing such analyses
Differing perspectives on economic decision-making, including a range of private sector points of view, as well as government and regulatory perspectives
In addition, five real-world case studies illustrate how such valuations have been done and their major impacts on investment decisions. HSI professionals, systems engineers, and finance professionals who address investment analysis will appreciate the wide range of methods and real-life applications; senior undergraduates and masters-level graduate students will find this to be an excellent textbook that provides theory and supports practice.
Fundamental Economic Principles, Methods, and Tools for Addressing Human Systems Integration Issues and Tradeoffs
Human Systems Integration (HSI) is a new and fundamental integrating discipline designed to help move business and engineering cultures toward more human-centered systems. Integrating consideration of human abilities, limitations, and preferences into engineering systems yields important cost and performance benefits that otherwise would not have been accomplished. In order for this new discipline to be effective, however, a cultural change—starting with organizational leadership—is often necessary.
The Economics of Human Systems Integration explains the difficulties underlying valuation of investments in people's training and education, safety and health, and work productivity. It provides an overview of how the field of economics addresses these difficulties, focusing on human issues associated with design, development, production, operations, maintenance, and sustainment of complex systems.
The set of thought leaders recruited as contributors to this volume collectively provides a compelling set of data and principles for assessing the economic value of investing in people, not just in general but in specific investment situations. The early chapters provide the contexts for HSI and investment analysis, illustrating the enormous difference context makes in how issues are best framed and analyzed. A host of practical methods and tools for investment valuation are then presented. Provided are:
A variety of real-world applications of economic analysis ranging from military acquisition and automotive investment to healthcare and high-tech investments in general, in both the U.S. and abroad
A range of economics-based methods and tools for cost analysis, cost-benefit analysis, and investment analysis, as well as sources of data for performing such analyses
Differing perspectives on economic decision-making, including a range of private sector points of view, as well as government and regulatory perspectives
In addition, five real-world case studies illustrate how such valuations have been done and their major impacts on investment decisions. HSI professionals, systems engineers, and finance professionals who address investment analysis will appreciate the wide range of methods and real-life applications; senior undergraduates and masters-level graduate students will find this to be an excellent textbook that provides theory and supports practice.
William B. Rouse
1.1 INTRODUCTION
This book is concerned with the economic value of investing in people. A range of types of investments is of interest, for example:
? Investments in work technologies directly augment people's performance.
? Investments in education and training enhance people's potential to perform.
? Investments in health and safety enhance people's availability to perform.
? Investments in organizational processes enhance people's willingness to perform.
Such investments interact, as shown in Figure 1.1, to enable work performance that translates demands for products and services into supply of products and services.
Note that this line of reasoning applies to people who operate, maintain, and manage systems, as well as to those who research, design, and invest in systems. There are many stakeholders in the success of a system. It is likely that investing in the performance of several types of stakeholders can enhance this success. Therefore, for example, investing solely in enhancing the performance of aircraft pilots will result in less success than achievable by also investing in aircraft mechanics and, perhaps, in aircraft designers.
Often the monies associated with these types of investments are simply viewed as operating costs. Investments in technologies such as computer workstations or manufacturing equipment usually show up as assets on an enterprise's balance sheet. However, monies spent on education, training, health, and safety usually only appear as expenses on the income statement. Thus, these expenditures may not be viewed as investments at all.
This book focuses on how to attach economic value to the returns provided by these expenditures. The goal is to provide an integrated view of how best to assess and project the economic value of people's performance, potential to perform, availability to perform, and willingness to perform. This involves considering both the costs of these investments and the subsequent economic returns, all over time. This also involves considering the uncertainties associated with these costs and returns.
It is useful to discuss why economic valuation of investments in people is difficult. One reason is the fact that such investments usually do not yield tangible assets—hence, they are absent from the balance sheet. One can inventory computers and equipment. However, it is difficult to "inventory" people's potential or availability to perform. An obvious reason is that one cannot own people, so they may deploy this potential elsewhere. Another complication is the fact that the circumstances may not call on people to perform (e.g., the demand in Figure 1.1 may be less than the work performance that could be supplied). Perhaps consumers will not want automobiles or refrigerators. Perhaps there will not be a war, a fire, or a crime.
Another reason for this difficulty is the typical lack of understanding of how work and work processes relate to value provided for customers or other constituencies. This makes it very difficult for enterprises to transform themselves when the nature of value fundamentally changes in a market (Rouse, 2006). Since the mids 1990s, (Hammer & Champy, 1994; Womack & Jones, 1996), there has been increased emphasis on understanding business processes and their relationships to value. Nevertheless, relatively few enterprises have mastered these skills.
Yet another reason underlying this difficulty is the lack of data upon which to base estimates of costs and returns, often in terms of cost savings. Perhaps surprisingly, organizations that have tendencies to document virtually every activity in their enterprise often have little ability to access this information for the purpose of estimating the parameters in economic models. The U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) is a notable example. The inability to estimate the costs of activities undermines the possibility of validating projected cost savings resulting from investing in people and, consequently, undermines the possibility of attaching value to these savings.
Despite such difficulties, it is very important that we have the methods and tools needed to attach economic value to investments in people. Many would agree with the general statement that a healthy, well-educated, and productive workforce is essential to a country's competitiveness. The question, however, is whether a particular health practice, educational program, or other investment will provide returns that justify the investment of scarce resources. Thus, we are less interested in the need to invest in general than we are in assessing and projecting the value of specific investments.
1.2 HUMAN SYSTEMS INTEGRATION
The issues and questions raised earlier could be addressed from a purely empirical perspective. One could collect data on the costs and returns of education, for example, and calculate an effective return on investment, for instance, for earning a college degree (see Chapters 4 and 5). Indeed, reports of such assessment frequently appear in newspapers and magazines. The general conclusion seems to be that investments in education do provide attractive returns in terms of enhanced incomes.
It this book, however, we are not concerned with investments in general. Instead, we would like to project the returns on investments in specific interventions for particular systems such as airplanes, ships, or factories. We would also like to address tradeoffs across alternative investments. For example, what are the relative returns from investments that directly augment human performance versus those that enhance the potential to perform (Rouse, 2007)? Should we invest scarce resources in a new flight management system or extended pilot training?
This book emphasizes the design, development, deployment, operation, and sustainment of complex systems. We want to engineer such systems so that the humans involved—operators, maintainers, and managers—are effective in performing their roles and in contributing to the value provided by these systems. The word "engineer" is used as a verb defining a set of activities rather than as a noun describing a discipline. Thus, the engineering of a system is perceived as involving many more disciplines than just engineering.
Systems engineering (SE) is the transdisciplinary set of activities that integrates across all the disciplines and activities involved in engineering complex systems. More specifically, "systems engineering is the management technology that controls a total system life-cycle process, which involves and which results in the definition, development, and deployment of a system that is of high quality, is trustworthy, and is cost-effective in meeting user needs" (Sage & Rouse, 2009). As might be imagined, SE involves a wide spectrum of methods, tools, and methodologies that address an enormous range of issues, many of which do not particularly relate to the humans associated with a complex system.
Human systems integration (HSI) is an element of SE that is concerned with understanding, designing, and supporting humans' roles and performance within a complex system. There are a variety of definitions of HSI. They fall into two broad classes (Booher, 1990, 2003; Pew & Mavor, 2007; Salvendy, 2006; INCOSE,...
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Hardcover. Zustand: new. Hardcover. Fundamental Economic Principles, Methods, and Tools for Addressing Human Systems Integration Issues and Tradeoffs Human Systems Integration (HSI) is a new and fundamental integrating discipline designed to help move business and engineering cultures toward more human-centered systems. Integrating consideration of human abilities, limitations, and preferences into engineering systems yields important cost and performance benefits that otherwise would not have been accomplished. In order for this new discipline to be effective, however, a cultural changestarting with organizational leadershipis often necessary. The Economics of Human Systems Integration explains the difficulties underlying valuation of investments in people's training and education, safety and health, and work productivity. It provides an overview of how the field of economics addresses these difficulties, focusing on human issues associated with design, development, production, operations, maintenance, and sustainment of complex systems. The set of thought leaders recruited as contributors to this volume collectively provides a compelling set of data and principles for assessing the economic value of investing in people, not just in general but in specific investment situations. The early chapters provide the contexts for HSI and investment analysis, illustrating the enormous difference context makes in how issues are best framed and analyzed. A host of practical methods and tools for investment valuation are then presented. Provided are: A variety of real-world applications of economic analysis ranging from military acquisition and automotive investment to healthcare and high-tech investments in general, in both the U.S. and abroad A range of economics-based methods and tools for cost analysis, cost-benefit analysis, and investment analysis, as well as sources of data for performing such analyses Differing perspectives on economic decision-making, including a range of private sector points of view, as well as government and regulatory perspectives In addition, five real-world case studies illustrate how such valuations have been done and their major impacts on investment decisions. HSI professionals, systems engineers, and finance professionals who address investment analysis will appreciate the wide range of methods and real-life applications; senior undergraduates and masters-level graduate students will find this to be an excellent textbook that provides theory and supports practice. Human Systems Integration is a new but fundamental integrating discipline in moving business and engineering cultures toward a more people-technology orientation. Economics of Human Systems Integration provides essential economic concepts, principles, methods, and tools on systems integration issues and tradeoffs. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 9780470486764
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Hardcover. Zustand: new. Hardcover. Fundamental Economic Principles, Methods, and Tools for Addressing Human Systems Integration Issues and Tradeoffs Human Systems Integration (HSI) is a new and fundamental integrating discipline designed to help move business and engineering cultures toward more human-centered systems. Integrating consideration of human abilities, limitations, and preferences into engineering systems yields important cost and performance benefits that otherwise would not have been accomplished. In order for this new discipline to be effective, however, a cultural changestarting with organizational leadershipis often necessary. The Economics of Human Systems Integration explains the difficulties underlying valuation of investments in people's training and education, safety and health, and work productivity. It provides an overview of how the field of economics addresses these difficulties, focusing on human issues associated with design, development, production, operations, maintenance, and sustainment of complex systems. The set of thought leaders recruited as contributors to this volume collectively provides a compelling set of data and principles for assessing the economic value of investing in people, not just in general but in specific investment situations. The early chapters provide the contexts for HSI and investment analysis, illustrating the enormous difference context makes in how issues are best framed and analyzed. A host of practical methods and tools for investment valuation are then presented. Provided are: A variety of real-world applications of economic analysis ranging from military acquisition and automotive investment to healthcare and high-tech investments in general, in both the U.S. and abroad A range of economics-based methods and tools for cost analysis, cost-benefit analysis, and investment analysis, as well as sources of data for performing such analyses Differing perspectives on economic decision-making, including a range of private sector points of view, as well as government and regulatory perspectives In addition, five real-world case studies illustrate how such valuations have been done and their major impacts on investment decisions. HSI professionals, systems engineers, and finance professionals who address investment analysis will appreciate the wide range of methods and real-life applications; senior undergraduates and masters-level graduate students will find this to be an excellent textbook that provides theory and supports practice. Human Systems Integration is a new but fundamental integrating discipline in moving business and engineering cultures toward a more people-technology orientation. Economics of Human Systems Integration provides essential economic concepts, principles, methods, and tools on systems integration issues and tradeoffs. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. Bestandsnummer des Verkäufers 9780470486764
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