Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-t5pn6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-23T16:40:17.863Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Managing stress with experience feedback in crisis situation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 May 2019

Sammy Teffali*
Affiliation:
University of Technology of Troyes, Troyes, France
Nada Matta
Affiliation:
University of Technology of Troyes, Troyes, France
Eric Chatelet
Affiliation:
University of Technology of Troyes, Troyes, France
*
Author for correspondence: Sammy Teffali, E-mail: sammy.teffali@utt.fr

Abstract

A crisis is a complex situation, which actors have some difficulties to manage it. They are under stress to deal with problems that they cannot predict consequences. The human conditions (familial and life) and, the influence of the environment (politic, economic, media) pushes the actors to lose control of the crisis situation. The question we face in this paper is: “is it possible to predict the impact of the stress in this type of situation?” Our main hypothesis to answer is to represent experience feedback using knowledge management. To model the crisis management as systemic system emphasizing regulation loops, and the collaboration activity by showing the dimension of the communication, coordination, and cooperation. This modeling is illustrated in a terrorist attack situation in Algeria. To predict stress consequences, fuzzy set principle is adopted, based on experience feedback and situations modeling, as a generator of alternative states given a stress event.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aronson, H and Weintraub, W (1972) Personal adaptation as reflected in verbal behavior. In Studies in Dyadic Communication. New York: Pergamon Press, pp. 265278.Google Scholar
Beck, U (1992) Risk Society: Towards A new Modernity. London: Sage.Google Scholar
Berkowitz, L (1962) Aggression: A social psychological analysis. McGraw-Hill series in psychology. New York 1, 361Google Scholar
Bogner, A and Menz, W (2009) The theory-generating expert interview: epistemological interest, forms of knowledge, interaction. In Interviewing Experts. Springer, pp. 4380.Google Scholar
Bouchon-Meunier, B and Zadeh, LA (1995) La logique floue et ses applications. Vie artifi. Paris, Auckland, Bogota, Paris, Reading (Mass.).Google Scholar
Bruchon-Schweitzer, M, Rascle, N, Quintard, B, Nuissier, J, Cousson, F and Aguerre, C (1997) Stress professionnel et santé. Cahiers Internationaux de Psychologie Sociale 33, 6174.Google Scholar
Cibiel, S (1999) Le personnel des services d'urgence face au stress. Pratiques Psychologiques 4, 123132.Google Scholar
Cooper, CL, Sloan, SJ and Williams, S (1988) Occupational Stress Indicator. UK: Nfer-Nelson Windsor.Google Scholar
Cox, T, Griffiths, A and Rial-González, E (2000) Research on Work-Related Stress. Sudbury: European Communities.Google Scholar
Dalkir, K and Liebowitz, J (2011) Knowledge Management in Theory and Practice. MIT press.Google Scholar
Davenport, TH, De Long, DW and Beers, MC (1998) Successful knowledge management projects. Sloan Management Review 39, 43.Google Scholar
De Rivera, J (1968) The Psychological Dimension of Foreign Policy. USA: CE Merrill Pub. Co.Google Scholar
Dieng-Kuntz, R and Matta, N (2002) Knowledge Management and Organizational Memories. Dordrecht: Springer.Google Scholar
Dittmann, AT (1962) The relationship between body movements and moods in interviews. Journal of Consulting Psychology 26, 480.Google Scholar
Ducrocq, F, Vaiva, G, Cottencin, O, Molenda, S and Bailly, D (2000) Post-traumatic stress, post-traumatic depression and major depressive episode: literature. L'Encephale 27, 159168.Google Scholar
Eichler, M (1965) The application of verbal behavior analysis to the study of psychological defense mechanisms: speech patterns associated with sociopathic behavior. The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 141, 658663.Google Scholar
Foguem, BK, Coudert, T, Béler, C and Geneste, L (2008) Knowledge formalization in experience feedback processes: an ontology-based approach. Computers in Industry 59, 694710.Google Scholar
Galindo, J, Carrasco, RA and Almagro, AM (2008) Fuzzy quantifiers with and without arguments for databases: definition, implementation and application to fuzzy dependencies. in Proceedings 12th international conference information processing and management of uncertainty for knowledge-based systems, Malaga, Spain, pp. 227234.Google Scholar
Gottschalk, LA, Winget, CM, Gleser, GC and Springer, KJ (1966) The measurement of emotional changes during a psychiatric interview: a working model toward quantifying the psychoanalytic concept of affect. In Methods of Research in Psychotherapy. Boston, MA: Springer, pp. 93126.Google Scholar
Grundstein, M (2000) From capitalizing on company knowledge to knowledge management. In Knowledge Management, Classic and Contemporary Works. Cambridge, MA: MIT press, pp. 261287.Google Scholar
Hermann, MG (1979) Indicators of stress in policymakers during foreign policy crises. Political Psychology 1, 2746. doi: 10.2307/3790849.Google Scholar
Hitzler, R (2013) Expertenwissen: Die Institutionalisierte Kompetenz zur Konstruktion von Wirklichkeit. Opladen: Springer-Verlag.Google Scholar
Holsti, OR (1972) Crisis Escalation war. Montreal: McGill-Queen's Press-MQUP.Google Scholar
Holsti, OR, Brody, RA and North, RC (1964) Measuring affect and action in international reaction models empirical materials from the 1962 Cuban crisis. Journal of Peace Research 1, 170189.Google Scholar
Jones, F, Bright, J and Clow, A (2001) Stress: Myth, Theory and Research. Harlow (England): Pearson Education.Google Scholar
Kanfer, FH (1959) Verbal rate, content and adjustment ratings in experimentally structured interviews. Journal of Abnormal & Social Psychology 58, 402.Google Scholar
Kasl, SV and Mahl, GF (1965) The relationship of disturbances and hesitations in spontaneous speech to anxiety. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 1, 425433.Google Scholar
Korchin, SJ (1964) Anxiety and cognition. Cognition: Theory, research, promise, ed. E. Scheerer. Harper & Row. [PFG].Google Scholar
Lagadec, P (1991) La gestion des crises: outils de réflexion à l'usage des décideurs. Ediscience International.Google Scholar
Lalljee, M and Cook, M (1973) Uncertainty in first encounters. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 26, 137.Google Scholar
Lazarus, RS and Folkman, S (1984) Stress, Appraisal, and Coping. New York: Springer Publishing Company.Google Scholar
Lazarus, RS, Opton, EM Jr and Spielberger, CD (1966) The study of psychological stress: a summary of theoretical formulations and experimental findings. Anxiety and Behavior 1, 225262.Google Scholar
Le Moigne, J-L (1994) La théorie du système général Théorie de la modélisation. ISBN 2-13-038483-8.Google Scholar
Martin, E, Nolte, I Jr and Vitolo, E (2016) The Four Cs of disaster partnering: communication, cooperation, coordination and collaboration. Disasters 40, 621–243. doi:10.1111/disa.12173.Google Scholar
Mehrabian, A (1968a) Inference of attitudes from the posture, orientation, and distance of a communicator. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 32, 296.Google Scholar
Mehrabian, A (1968b) Relationship of attitude to seated posture, orientation, and distance. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 10, 26.Google Scholar
Mehrabian, A and Ksionzky, S (1972) Categories of social behavior. Comparative Group Studies 3, pp. 425436.Google Scholar
Michel, S (1993) Pouvoirs contre SIDA. De la transfusion sanguine au dépistage: décisions et pratiques en France, Grande-Bretagne et Suède. Paris, Seuil, coll. Sociologie.Google Scholar
Morin, E (2013) La méthode: la nature de la nature. Le Seuil. ISBN 2021120139.Google Scholar
Murray, EJ (1954) A case study in a behavioral analysis of psychotherapy. The Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology 49, 305.Google Scholar
Nonaka, I and Takeuchi, H (1995) The Knowledge-Creating Company: How Japanese Companies Create the Dynamics of Innovation. USA: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Osgood, CE and Walker, EG (1959) Motivation and language behavior: a content analysis of suicide notes. The Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology 59, 58.Google Scholar
Pauchant, TC and Mitroff, II (1992) Transforming the Crisis-Prone Organization: Preventing Individual, Organizational, and Environmental Tragedies. USA: Jossey-Bass.Google Scholar
Pauchant, TC, Mitroff, II and Lagadec, P (1991) Toward a systemic crisis management strategy: learning from the best examples in the US, Canada and France. Industrial Crisis Quarterly 5, 209232.Google Scholar
Paulhan, I (1992) Le concept de coping. L'année Psychologique 92, 545557.Google Scholar
Racoceanu, D (2006) Contribution à la surveillance des Systèmes de Production en utilisant les Techniques de l'Intelligence Artificielle. Habilitation à diriger des recherches, Université de FRANCHE COMTÉ de Besançon, France.Google Scholar
Rosenblatt, PC (1964) Origins and effects of group ethnocentrism and nationalism. Journal of Conflict Resolution 8, 131146.Google Scholar
Rosental, C (1998) Histoire de la logique floue une approche sociologique des pratiques de démonstration. Revue de Synthèse 119, 575602.Google Scholar
Rosenthal, U, Charles, MT and Hart, P (1989) Coping with Crises: The Management of Disasters, Riots, and Terrorism. USA: Charles C Thomas Pub Ltd.Google Scholar
Rosenthal, U and Kouzmin, A (1997) Crises and crisis management: Toward comprehensive government decision making. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory 7, 277304.Google Scholar
Ross, TJ (2009) Fuzzy Logic with Engineering Applications. England: John Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
Ruggles, R (1998) The state of the notion: knowledge management in practice. California Management Review 40, 8089.Google Scholar
Schlenker, BR and Miller, RS (1977) Egocentrism in groups: self-serving biases or logical information processing? Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 35, 755.Google Scholar
Schmidt, K (1994) Cooperative work and its articulation Travail Humain 57, 345366.Google Scholar
Sediri, M, Matta, N, Loriette, S and Hugerot, A (2013) Crisis clever, a system for supporting crisis managers. in Proceedings of IEEE, ACM, Proceeding ISCRAM, 10th Internationa Conference on Information Systems for Crisis Response and Management. Baden-Baden, Germany.Google Scholar
Selye, H (1974) Stress Sans Détresse. Montreal: Lippincott.Google Scholar
Shrivastava, P (1987) Bhopal: Anatomy of A Crisis. Cambridge, MA: Ballinger.Google Scholar
Siegman, AW and Pope, B (2016) Studies in dyadic communication. Pergamon g. New York: Pergamon press.Google Scholar
Starbuck, WH and Milliken, FJ (1988) Challenger: fine-tuning the odds until something breaks. Journal of Management Studies 25, 319340.Google Scholar
Steiler, D and Rosnet, E (2011) La mesure du stress professionnel. Différentes méthodologies de recueil. La revue des Sciences de Gestion 5, 7179.Google Scholar
Von Bertalanffy, L (1972) The history and status of general systems theory. Academy of Management Journal 15, 407426.Google Scholar
Weintraub, W and Aronson, H (1967) The application of verbal behavior analysis to the study of psychological defense mechanisms. IV: speech pattern associated with depressive behavior. The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 144, 2228.Google Scholar
Wielinga, BJ, Schreiber, AT and Breuker, JA (1992) KADS: a modelling approach to knowledge engineering. Knowledge Acquisition 4, 553.Google Scholar
Zadeh, LA (1996) “Fuzzy sets”, in Fuzzy Sets, Fuzzy Logic, And Fuzzy Systems: Selected Papers by Lotfi A Zadeh. World Scientific, pp. 394432.Google Scholar
Zimmermann, H (2010) Fuzzy set theory. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Computational Statistics 2, 317332.Google Scholar