11. "Analysis of a Decision Making Investigation"
ABSTRACT
Those management and social scientists dealing
with organizational behavior are severely limited by the need for more operational
theory and by the paucity of experimental data on important events and phenomena.
The many practical and conceptual reasons why experiments in the classical sense
cannot be conducted lead us to consider a less rigorous form of inquiry called
an investigation. A possible heuristic procedure for analyzing data from investigations
is proposed. The heuristic has the property that rather than selecting favorable
events to support a theory, it codes and incorporates observed events systematically
into a testing of theory. This procedure is applied to data from the Churchman-Ratoosh
laboratory investigations of implementation processes. Our results are consistent
with the assumption of a constant source diffusion of innovation process. Data
for the diffusion process and attendant structural change are presented in terms
of models. The application of the heuristic also suggests questions for further
diffusion and implementation experiments.