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Distributed cognition: Theoretical insights and practical applications to health professions education: AMEE Guide No. 159

James G. Boyle, Matthew R. Walters, Susan Jamieson, Steven J. Durning

2023Medical Teacher20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Distributed cognition (DCog) is a member of the family of situativity theories that widens the lens of cognition from occurring solely inside the head to being socially, materially and temporally distributed within a dynamic system. The concept of extending the view of cognition to outside the head of a single health professional is relatively new in the healthcare system. DCog has been increasingly used by researchers to describe many ways in which health professionals perform in teams within structured clinical environments to deliver healthcare for patients. In this Guide, we expound ten central tenets of the macro (grand) theory of DCog (1. Cognition is decentralized in a system; 2. The unit of analysis is the system; 3. Cognitive processes are distributed; 4. Cognitive processes emerge from interactions; 5. Cognitive processes are interdependent; 6. Social organization is a cognitive architecture; 7. Division of labour; 8. Social organization is a system of communication; 9. Buffering and filtering; 10. Cognitive processes are encultured) to provide theoretical insights as well as practical applications to the field of health professions education.

Topics & Concepts

CognitionInterdependenceHealth careField (mathematics)Division of labourCognitive scienceKnowledge managementSocial cognitionComputer sciencePsychologyManagement scienceSociologyEngineeringPolitical scienceSocial scienceMathematicsNeuroscienceLawPure mathematicsClinical Reasoning and Diagnostic SkillsInnovations in Medical EducationRadiology practices and education