SYMP 9-3
Supporting team science by coordinating cognition across levels of analysis
Results/Conclusions: I describe the macrocognition in teams framework, a multi-level model of collaboration developed to scaffold research on knowledge building and the generation of solutions to complex problems. I provide macro and micro level perspectives on collaborative cognition to show how a multidisciplinary approach to theory and practice can contribute to our understanding of complex problems. As researchers from ecological and social sciences collaborate to solve scientific problems, attention must be paid to theories that can inform their problem solving. I focus on knowledge-building processes in science teams and illustrate how externalized cognitive representations can support theory development and empirical investigation in team science. External cognitive representations are conceptualized as knowledge in the environment such as graphical representation, conceptual models, physical symbols, and can be used to illustrate relations between abstract and/or concrete factors. In this ways, I show how features of problems can be distributed across an individual's internal cognitive system as well as across the collaborative problem-solving context. This presentation is organized around a multi-level theoretical approach that incorporates the role of internalized and externalized team knowledge along with individual and team knowledge building process as teams move through phases of problem solving.