Hilary Scarlett and the Neuroscience of Organisational Change (pt.2)
Saturday, 18 Nov 2023, 13:15
Visible to anyone in the world
Edited by Alfred Anate Mayaki, Monday, 20 Nov 2023, 07:32
Thank you to
Hilary Scarlett for taking the time out of your schedule to speak to me about
your amazing journey towards your current aspirations (for all but 20 minutes)
and thank you for sharing with me how we can help answer important questions
with your book on the subject of change.
It
was great meeting up with cognitive neuroscientist, author, and scholar Hilary
Scarlett yesterday on Zoom. I told her how I used
to work opposite two very capable project consultants who each led on change. I
also sat beside a very well-paid BA. As I introduced my
questions, I noted that what impressed me about these respective roles was the fact that they were concerned with change concurrently with operative business; these people worked on endlessly whilst the business of the department
trotted alongside. So, I sort of got the impression that the business was
constantly moving and always evolving. Jiras were being filed seamlessly, and
Pega requests were being signed off, without interruption.
Now, as you guys know, I recently wrote in an OU blog post that stated “in the postmodern literature on organisational change, the subject is often thought of as an ontology" (Tsoukas and Chia, 2002). I asked Hilary if
she would agree that neuroscience is at the forefront of
the multi-disciplinary movement to help better understand organisational thought? I didn't quite get the reply I was looking for.
I then told Hilary
that one of my main influences was the work of Cambridge University's Professor of Clinical Neuropsychology, Barbara Sahakian in a study she pioneered alongside co-author, CfEL's Professor Shai Vyakarnam entitled: "The Innovative Brain", which was published in Nature (Sahakian, et. al., 2008). Hilary's response was
amazing. She gave me insight into a few prominent perspectives on change and explained
that in her time as a Languages undergrad and Psychology graduate, she herself
was introduced to a paper on neuroscience which convinced her that was the
industry she wanted to pursue. We ended our brief conversation shortly after.
Now, there is a widely cited academic article
that focuses on the role of “context” in OB discourse (Gary Johns, 2006).
Succinctly put, "context" is seen by Johns as: “the surroundings associated with
phenomena which help to illuminate [sic] phenomenon, typically factors
associated with units of analysis above those expressly under investigation” (Capelli and Sherer, 1991:56). Alongside this widely cited article
are several other articles which reference the work of Gary Johns (2006), and
which present the influence of this nature of “context” on the field of HRM.
I shall leave us all with a question based on
this premise: How relevant are cognitive models of analysis such as the Maslows
and the McGregors on the emergence of HRM as an interdisciplinary field or as
its own research domain? More or less important than our respective realities?
References
1. Cappelli,
P. and Sherer, P. D. (1991) "The missing role of context in OB: The need for a
meso-level approach", Research in Organizational Behaviour, 13: pp. 55–110
2. Chia,
R. (1995) "From Modern to Postmodern Organizational Analysis", Organization
Studies, 16(4), pp. 579-604
3. Johns,
G. (2006) "The Essential Impact of Context on Organizational Behaviour", The
Academy of Management Review, 31(2), pp. 386–408
4. Tsoukas,
H. and Chia, R. (2002) “On organizational becoming: rethinking organizational
change”, Organization
Science, 13(5), pp. 567+
--------
This post was written by Alfred Anate Mayaki, a student on the MSc in HRM, and was inspired by the work of Barbara Sahakian (2008) in a Nature article entitled: "The Innovative Brain".
Hilary Scarlett and the Neuroscience of Organisational Change (pt.2)
Thank you to Hilary Scarlett for taking the time out of your schedule to speak to me about your amazing journey towards your current aspirations (for all but 20 minutes) and thank you for sharing with me how we can help answer important questions with your book on the subject of change.
It was great meeting up with cognitive neuroscientist, author, and scholar Hilary Scarlett yesterday on Zoom. I told her how I used to work opposite two very capable project consultants who each led on change. I also sat beside a very well-paid BA. As I introduced my questions, I noted that what impressed me about these respective roles was the fact that they were concerned with change concurrently with operative business; these people worked on endlessly whilst the business of the department trotted alongside. So, I sort of got the impression that the business was constantly moving and always evolving. Jiras were being filed seamlessly, and Pega requests were being signed off, without interruption.
Now, as you guys know, I recently wrote in an OU blog post that stated “in the postmodern literature on organisational change, the subject is often thought of as an ontology" (Tsoukas and Chia, 2002). I asked Hilary if she would agree that neuroscience is at the forefront of the multi-disciplinary movement to help better understand organisational thought? I didn't quite get the reply I was looking for.
I then told Hilary that one of my main influences was the work of Cambridge University's Professor of Clinical Neuropsychology, Barbara Sahakian in a study she pioneered alongside co-author, CfEL's Professor Shai Vyakarnam entitled: "The Innovative Brain", which was published in Nature (Sahakian, et. al., 2008). Hilary's response was amazing. She gave me insight into a few prominent perspectives on change and explained that in her time as a Languages undergrad and Psychology graduate, she herself was introduced to a paper on neuroscience which convinced her that was the industry she wanted to pursue. We ended our brief conversation shortly after.
Now, there is a widely cited academic article that focuses on the role of “context” in OB discourse (Gary Johns, 2006). Succinctly put, "context" is seen by Johns as: “the surroundings associated with phenomena which help to illuminate [sic] phenomenon, typically factors associated with units of analysis above those expressly under investigation” (Capelli and Sherer, 1991:56). Alongside this widely cited article are several other articles which reference the work of Gary Johns (2006), and which present the influence of this nature of “context” on the field of HRM.
I shall leave us all with a question based on this premise: How relevant are cognitive models of analysis such as the Maslows and the McGregors on the emergence of HRM as an interdisciplinary field or as its own research domain? More or less important than our respective realities?
References
1. Cappelli, P. and Sherer, P. D. (1991) "The missing role of context in OB: The need for a meso-level approach", Research in Organizational Behaviour, 13: pp. 55–110
2. Chia, R. (1995) "From Modern to Postmodern Organizational Analysis", Organization Studies, 16(4), pp. 579-604
3. Johns, G. (2006) "The Essential Impact of Context on Organizational Behaviour", The Academy of Management Review, 31(2), pp. 386–408
4. Tsoukas, H. and Chia, R. (2002) “On organizational becoming: rethinking organizational change”, Organization Science, 13(5), pp. 567+
--------
This post was written by Alfred Anate Mayaki, a student on the MSc in HRM, and was inspired by the work of Barbara Sahakian (2008) in a Nature article entitled: "The Innovative Brain".