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Dr. Richard I. Cook (1953 – August 31, 2022) was a system safety researcher, physician, anesthesiologist, university professor, and software engineer. Cook did research in safety, incident analysis,
cognitive systems engineering Cognitive systems engineering (CSE) is a field of study that examines the intersection of people, work, and technology, with a focus on safety-critical systems. The central tenet of cognitive systems engineering is that it views a collection of peo ...
, and resilience engineering across a number of fields, including critical care medicine, aviation, air traffic control, space operations, semiconductor manufacturing, and software services.


Biography

Cook graduated Cum Laude from
Lawrence University Lawrence University is a private liberal arts college and conservatory of music in Appleton, Wisconsin. Founded in 1847, its first classes were held on November 12, 1849. Lawrence was the second college in the U.S. to be founded as a coeducation ...
in 1975 from a customized program that included physics and urban planning. After completing his bachelor's degree, Cook took a position as a lead systems analysis at
Control Data Corporation Control Data Corporation (CDC) was a mainframe and supercomputer firm. CDC was one of the nine major United States computer companies through most of the 1960s; the others were IBM, Burroughs Corporation, DEC, NCR, General Electric, Honeywel ...
, working with finite element analysis programs such as ANSYS and
NASTRAN NASTRAN is a finite element analysis (FEA) program that was originally developed for NASA in the late 1960s under United States government funding for the aerospace industry. The MacNeal-Schwendler Corporation (MSC) was one of the principal and o ...
on the CDC STAR-100, and managing teams of programmers and support analysts. In 1986, Cook received his MD degree from the
University of Cincinnati The University of Cincinnati (UC or Cincinnati) is a public research university in Cincinnati, Ohio. Founded in 1819 as Cincinnati College, it is the oldest institution of higher education in Cincinnati and has an annual enrollment of over 44,00 ...
where he was a General Surgery intern. In 1994, he completed his Anesthesiology residence at the
Ohio State University The Ohio State University, commonly called Ohio State or OSU, is a public land-grant research university in Columbus, Ohio. A member of the University System of Ohio, it has been ranked by major institutional rankings among the best publ ...
. Cook served in the Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care at the
University of Chicago The University of Chicago (UChicago, Chicago, U of C, or UChi) is a private research university in Chicago, Illinois. Its main campus is located in Chicago's Hyde Park neighborhood. The University of Chicago is consistently ranked among the b ...
as an associate professor and Director of the Cognitive Technologies Laboratory from 1994 to 2012, where he provided clinical care, did teaching and training, research, and community service. In 2012, Cook was named Sweden's First Professor of Patient Safety, at
KTH Royal Institute of Technology The KTH Royal Institute of Technology ( sv, Kungliga Tekniska högskolan, lit=Royal Institute of Technology), abbreviated KTH, is a public research university in Stockholm, Sweden. KTH conducts research and education in engineering and technolo ...
, where he served until 2015, when he retired from the position as a Professor
Emeritus ''Emeritus'' (; female: ''emerita'') is an adjective used to designate a retired chair, professor, pastor, bishop, pope, director, president, prime minister, rabbi, emperor, or other person who has been "permitted to retain as an honorary title ...
. From 2015 to 2020, Cook worked as a research scientist at the Ohio State University in the Department of Integrated Systems Engineering. During this time, he also had a part-time appointment as a clinical professor of anesthesiology at the
Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center is a multidisciplinary academic medical center located in Columbus, Ohio, United States, on the main campus of The Ohio State University. For 29 consecutive years, '' U.S. News & World Report'' has ...
, where he provided patient care and trained new medical practitioners. In 2017, Cook, along with John Allspaw and David Woods, founded a consulting company, Adaptive Capacity Labs.


Patient safety work

Cook was active in the patient safety movement from the mid-1990s to the mid-2000s. He was one of the founding board members of the
National Patient Safety Foundation The National Patient Safety Foundation (NPSF) was an independent not-for-profit organization created in 1997 to advance the safety of health care workers and patients, and disseminate strategies to prevent harm. In May 2017, the Institute for He ...
and served on its executive committee until 2007. From 1998 to 2000, he advised the U.S. Veterans Health Administration (VA) on patient safety initiatives, and in 2000 was appointed co-director of a V.A. "Gaps Center" that was funded due to Cook's research. In 1997, Cook helped organize the workshop "Assembling the Scientific Basis for Progress on Patient Safety" in Chicago, and co-authored the resulting report published the following year
A Tale of Two Stories: Contrasting Views of Patient Safety
In 2011, Cook served on an advisory panel for the Institute of Medicine on the topic of Health IT and Patient Safety. In the final published report, he wrote a dissent where he argued that health IT software should be regulated as a class III medical device.


How complex systems fail

In 1998, Cook wrote a treatise titled
How Complex Systems Fail
', republished in the book Web Operations: Keeping the Data on Time, and Hindsight magazine, where he identified eighteen characteristics of complex system failure modes. In 2012, Cook gave a talk on the topic at the O’Reilly Velocity conference.


New look

Cook was a proponent of what came to be known as the "n''ew look"'' of safety (referred to by Sidney Dekker as the "''new view"''). According to the New Look, operators within safety-critical are faced with competing demands, dilemmas, conflicts (both technical and organizational), and uncertainty. In particular, operators are always faced with the competing demands for achieving production goals and for failure-free operations. When accidents occur, they tend to be attributed to
human error Human error refers to something having been done that was " not intended by the actor; not desired by a set of rules or an external observer; or that led the task or system outside its acceptable limits".Senders, J.W. and Moray, N.P. (1991) Human ...
because of hindsight bias. Interventions in the wake of accidents lead to a cycle of error, where they increase the complexity of the system and create the potential for new failure modes. Instead of focusing on the people in the system as the source of accidents, the "new look" perspective argues that it is the people in the system that create the safety in the system; that it is the work of the human operators that compensate for gaps in the designed system, and that successful work is much more common than failure.


"Going sour"

Cook (along with David Woods and John McDonald) introduced the term ''going sour'' to refer to incidents where there is a slow degradation of system performance over time. Cook noted ''going sour'' incidents are more complex and more difficult to describe than ''acute'' incidents. In addition, in these types of incidents, the actions of human operators play more of a role in how the incident unfolds.


"Going solid"

Cook (along with Jens Rasmussen) introduced the term ''going solid'' to describe a significant shift in systems operations when a form of capacity becomes exhausted. The term originates from the nuclear power industry, where it is used as slang to refer to a technical situation that has become difficult to manage. More literally, the term describes a change in system behavior related to the state of a steam boiler. Typically, a steam boiler contains a mixture of steam and liquid water. When the boiler becomes completely filled with liquid water, it is said to "go solid". Cook applied the concept of "going solid" to an intensive care unit in a hospital that undergoes a "bed crunch", when there are no longer enough beds to assign to patients. Cook notes that ''"''going solid" situations tend to foster opportunities for accidents to occur.


Line of representation

Cook noted that operators of software systems are not able to interact directly with the systems that they supervise, but instead they interact through ''representations''. Operators see visual representations of the internal state of software systems, and they manipulate representations in order to act on the system. Cook used the term ''line of representation'' as a metaphor for distinguishing between two sets of entities. Above the line of representation lie people, organizations, and human processes. Below the line of representation are the software artifacts and infrastructure. Cook notes that the people within an organization, who exist above the line, will describe in concrete terms the entities below the line, despite not being able to directly observe or act upon these entities.


Selected publications

* 1994 — Cook, R.I., Woods, D.D., Operating at the Sharp End: The Complexity of Human Error, in: Human Error in Medicine, Bogner, M.S., ed., CRC Press, June 1994 ( doi:10.1201/9780203751725) * 1998 — Cook, R.I.
How Complex Systems Fail
Cognitive Technologies Laboratory, University of Chicago, Revision D (00.04.21) * 1998 — A Tale of Two Stories: Contrasting Views of Patient Safety, National Health Care Safety Council of the National Patient Safety Foundation at the AMA, 1998 * 1998 — Cook, R.I., Two years before the mast: learning how to learn about patient safety, In: Scheffler AL, Zipperer LA, eds. Proceedings of the Second Annenberg Conference on Enhancing Patient Safety and Reducing Errors in Healthcare. Rancho Mirage, CA: National Patient Safety Foundation, pp61-4. * 1998 — Cook, R.I. Being Bumpable, Proceedings of the Fourth Conference on Naturalistic Decision Making, May 29–31, 1998, The Airlie Conference Center, Warrenton, VA * 2000 — Cook R.I, Render M., Woods, D.D., Gaps in the continuity of care and progress on patient safety, ''BMJ Clinical Research'' 2000;320(7237):791-4. * 2005 — Cook R.I, Rasmussen J., “Going solid”: a model of system dynamics and consequences for patient safety, ''BMJ Quality & Safety'' 2005;14:130-134. * 2005 – Cook, R.I
A brief look at the New Look in complex system failure, error, safety, and resilience
Cognitive Technologies Laboratory, University of Chicago, Revision AA (05.11.07). * 2006 — Cook, R.I., Woods, D.D., Distancing Through Differencing: An Obstacle to Organizational Learning Following Accidents, in: Resilience Engineering, Nov. 2006 ( doi:10.1201/9781315605685-28) * 2010 — Woods, D.D., Dekker, S., Cook, R.I., Johannesen, L., Sarter, N. Behind Human Error, 2nd Edition, CRC Press, 2010. * 2020 — Cook, R.I., Above the Line, Below the Line, ACM Queue 2020; 17(6) ( doi:10.1145/3380774.3380777)


Recorded talks

The Future of above-the-line Tooling
SRECon Americas 2022
A Few Observations on the Marvelous Resilience of Bone & Resilience Engineering
REdeploy Conference, San Francisco, CA, 2019
Resilience In Complex Adaptive Systems
O'Reilly Velocity Web Performance and Operations Conference, New York, NA, 2013
How Complex Systems Fail
O'Reilly Velocity Web Performance And Operations Conference, Santa Clara, CA, 2012
Lectures on the study of cognitive work
The Royal Institute of Technology, Huddinge, Sweden, 2012


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Cook, Richard 20th-century American physicians 21st-century American physicians 1953 births 2022 deaths Lawrence University alumni University of Cincinnati alumni Systems engineers American anesthesiologists University of Cincinnati College of Medicine alumni