Paul Johnson

Professor Emeritus at Carlson School of Management

Schools

  • Carlson School of Management

Links

Biography

Carlson School of Management

Paul Johnson

Professor Emeritus

Information & Decision Sciences

Education

BS 1960
University of Minnesota

PhD 1964
Johns Hopkins University

Expertise

Decisionmaking

Intelligent systems

Knowledge work

Paul Johnson is Carlson professor of Decision Sciences and adjunct professor of Psychology, Computer Science, and Health Informatics. He is a member of the Cognitive Sciences Center as well as the Center for Political Psychology. His research focuses on the study of expertise in complex problem solving and decisionmaking tasks, decision failures that arise from the misperception or misrepresentation of information (e.g., deception), and the use of knowledge resources and decision technologies in professional and technical work. Professor Johnson and his students have investigated decisionmaking activities of individuals and organizations in a variety of settings, including health care (diagnosis and best practice in the management of chronic diseases), auditing (fraud detection), semiconductor manufacturing (troubleshooting), software engineering (maintenance), and foreignexchange trading. Professor Johnson''s teaching interests include cognitive science, intelligent systems, knowledge management, and managerial decisionmaking.

Selected Works

Van de Ven, Andrew H., Johnson, Paul E. (2006) Knowledge for Theory and Practice. Academy of Management Review(31)4: 802821.

Grazioli, S., Jamal, K., Johnson, P.E. A Cognitive Approach to Fraud Detection. Journal of Forensic Accounting. June 2006 (7):6588.

Veazie P, Johnson P.E., O'Connor PJ, Rush WA, SperlHillen JM and Anderson LH. Making Improvements in the Management of Patients with Type 2 Diabetes: A Possible Role for the Control of Variation in Glycated Hemoglobin. Medical Hypotheses; 2005, 64, 792801.

Psychological Explorations of Competent DecisionMaking, eds. K. Smith, J. Shanteau, and P. Johnson (Cambridge University Press, 2004).

Grazioli, S., Smith, K. and Johnson, P.E. Managing risk in social exchange. In K. Smith, J. Shanteau, and P. Johnson (Eds.), Psychological Investigations of Competence in DecisionMaking. Cambridge University Press. 2004, pp 71123.

Johnson, P.E., Veazie, Peter J., O?Connor, Patrick J., Potthoff, Sandra J., Kochevar, Laura, Verma, Devesh, and Dutta, Pradyumna. Understanding variation in chronic disease outcomes. Hth Care Mgmt Sci, 2002, 5, 175189.

Johnson, P.E., Grazoli, S., Karim, J. & Berryman, R.G. Detecting deception: adversarial problem solving in a low baserate world. Cognitive Science, 2001, 25, 355392.

Reed, N.E., Gini, M., & Johnson, P.E (1996). Robust strategies for diagnosing manufacturing defects. Applied Artificial Intelligence, 10, 387406.

Johnson, P.E., Bullemer, P., Hassebrock, F., Fox, P.W., Moller, J.H. When less is more: representation and selective memory in expert problem solving, American J Psychol, 1993; 106(2): 155 189.

Johnson, P.E., Grazioli, S. & Jamal, K. (1993). Fraud detection: Intentionality and deception in cognition. Accounting, Organizations and Society, 18(5), 467488.

Johnson, P.E., Zualkernan, I.A. & Tukey, D. (1993). Types of expertise: An invariant of problem solving. International Journal of ManMachine Studies, 39, 641665.

Johnson, P.E., Grazioli, S. & Jamal, K. (1992). Success and failure in expert reasoning. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 53, 173203.

Zualkernan, I.A. & Johnson, P.E. (1992). Metaphors of reasoning as problem solving tools. Metaphor and Symbolic Activity, 7(3&4), 157184.

Current Activities

Current Research

Best practices in health care

Medical error and the logic of failure

Deception and fraud

Read about executive education

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