On-Demand Webinar: Judgment and Decision-Making in Dam Engineering
Association of State Dam Safety Officials, 2020
Dam engineering involves dams, but is done by and for people. As a result, in order to achieve dam benefits while maintaining dam safety, we need to understand not just dams, but also the people involved in designing, constructing, operating, maintaining, and benefiting from them. Social scientists have been studying people scientifically for more than a century, and we are now at a point historically where the social sciences have generated valuable insights into human thought and behavior.
The aim of this webinar is to describe key socio-psychological insights and apply them to the practice of dam engineering, with an emphasis on judgment and decision-making. We will find that judgment and decision-making are influenced by aspects such as subconscious and conscious cognition, perception, belief, memory, self-concept, use of heuristics, cognitive and motivational biases, emotions, and group dynamics, and expertise, all of which contribute to both human capability and human fallibility.
This webinar will explore all of these aspects, will include extensive audience participation, and will provide evidence-based suggestions for how we can improve our judgment and decision-making at both individual and group levels. The insights and suggestions presented in this webinar will be linked with the instructor's prior work on human factors to provide an overall framework for dam risk management.
Key Take-aways:
- Understand the physical, social, and evolutionary context in which dam engineers operate.
- Learn about the two main ways in which people “think.”
- Learn about the socio-psychological factors which contribute to human fallibility and limitations, as well as human capabilities.
- Learn ways to improve judgment, decision-making, and risk management in dam engineering.
Access Training Here
Speaker(s): Irfan A. Alvi
Revision ID: 2322
Revision Date: 08/19/2022