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Foundations for Measuring Effectiveness. Major Richard ‘Kelly’ Bullock Dr Richard F. Deckro Department of Operational Sciences Air Force Institute of Technology Wright-Patterson AFB, OH USA. 30 August 2005. Research Motivation. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
I n t e g r i t y - S e r v i c e - E x c e l l e n c e
Air Force Institute of Technology
Major Richard ‘Kelly’ BullockDr Richard F. Deckro
Department of Operational SciencesAir Force Institute of TechnologyWright-Patterson AFB, OHUSA
Foundations forMeasuring Effectiveness
30 August 2005
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Research Motivation Accurately predicting outcomes and assessing progress has challenged
leaders since the earliest use of national power to achieve political aims Especially true of military power
Many theories on how to employ national power to achieve desired end-states
Douhet, Jomini, Trenchard, Mitchell, Schelling,…
Effects-based Operations Not new, but efforts to ‘institutionalize’ EBO concepts are
US Joint doctrine and service doctrine, particularly USAF doctrine, has undergone change to reflect EBO concepts
History has shown theory is of little value if not supported by an empirically feasible measurement method
One accurate measurement is worth a thousand expert opinions.– ADMIRAL GRACE HOPPER, 1906 – 1992
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Patton on MOEs…
“How many officers did you lose today?” asked Patton. “We were fortunate,” Ward replied. “We didn’t lose any officers.” “Goddamit, Ward, that’s not fortunate! That’s bad for the morale of the enlisted men. I want you to get more officers killed.” A brief pause followed before Ward said, “You’re not serious, are you?” “Yes, goddamit, I’m serious! I want you to put some officers out as observers,” said Patton. “Keep them well up front until a couple get killed. It’s good for enlisted morale.”
Discussion between General George Patton and General Orlando Ward during WWII:
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Overview
Background Measurement Concepts Measurement Theory Application of Measurement Effects-based Operations Effects
Effectiveness Measurement Foundations Definitions Concepts Framework
Takeaways
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BackgroundMeasurement Concepts
Measurement is the objective representation of real-world objects, processes, and phenomenon
Measurement captures information through attributes Attributes may not be directly observable
A real-world system is defined by the attributes chosen to represent it Measurement is an abstraction
Measurement is the process of assigning symbols to a system attribute such that the assigned symbols reflect the underlying nature of the attributes
Set X Set Y
A
B
C
D
E 1.2
3.7
3.12.5
6.2
5.48.9
measurement)(XfY
Set X Set Y
A
B
C
D
E 1.2
3.7
3.12.5
6.2
5.48.9
measurement)(XfY
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BackgroundMeasurement Concepts
To measure is to know.– LORD KELVIN, 1824 – 1907
validity – how well a measure reflects what it was supposed to represent reliability – how consistent or repeatable the measurement process isamplitude – how well a measure represents higher order constructs
random – ‘noise’ variation from any source impacting the system systemic – (bias) derives from construction of the measure or definition of the measurement processobservational – oversight of a key system attribute or using the wrong measure for a system attribute Statistical Theory – concerns making inferences from data Measurement Theory – link between data and real-world
Empirical
System
Object,Process, or
Phenomenon
Abstract Attributes
Measure
Numbers
Numerals
Assessment
Reasoning &Mathematics
Insights &Information
= source for potential error
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BackgroundMeasurement Theory
Measurement Theory is a branch of applied mathematics that attempts to: Describe, categorize, and evaluate the quality of measurements Improve the usefulness, accuracy, and meaningfulness of measurements
Representational view of measurement built upon 3 theorems
Representation – Proves the measure f preserves the relationships in X after mapping into Y (i.e. model validation)
Uniqueness – Characterizes the family of measures that preserve the real-world relationships (i.e. scale type)
Meaningfulness – Shows resultant is invariant to scale change for measures meeting the uniqueness condition
AB
C
D
E
Set X
1.2
3.7
3.12.5
6.2
5.48.9
Set Y
measurement)(XfY
NominalOrdinal
Interval
Ratio
Absolute
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BackgroundApplication of Measurement
Application of measurement is… an art the mechanism for extracting information from empirical
observation within a specified context the translation of behavior into a set of ‘vital signs’ indicating
variations in behavior Application guidelines
Frameworks Vertical Horizontal
Effectiveness vs. Efficiency Measure Types & Characteristics
...things are to you such as they appear to you and to me such as they appear to me... – PROTAGORAS, 485 – 421 B.C.
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BackgroundFrameworks
Vertical (or Hierarchical) Structure
Horizontal Structure
FundamentalObjective
Sub-Objective
O1
Sub-Objective
O2
Sub-Objective
OX
ValueV1
ValueV2
ValueVY
Attribute1 Attribute2 AttributeZ
Objective11
Objective12
Objective1M
Objective21
Objective22
Objective23
Objective24
Objective2N
Objective31
Objective32
Objective33
Objective34
Objective35
Objective36
Objective3P
What?
Why?
How?
Effectiveness
Efficiency
We must make the important measurable, not the measurable important. – ROBERT MCNAMARA, 1916 –
Measure of Effectiveness (MOE)
Measure of Performance (MOP)
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BackgroundMeasure Types & Characteristics
Natural Constructed
Direct- Commonly understood measures directly linked to
fundamental objective- Example: Profit
- Measures directly linked to the fundamental objective but developed for a specific purpose
- Example: Gymnastics scoring
Proxy- In general use measures focused on an objective
correlated with the fundamental objective- Example: GNP (economic well being)
- Measures developed for a specific purpose focused on an objective correlated to the strategic objective
- Example: Student grades
Strategically-linked – traceable to fundamental objective; responsive to change and provides indication of how much change can be attributed to an input
Timely – able to be collected and processed in a timeframe needed to be relevant within the context
Objective – 1) Collection: easy to understand, same regardless of the assessor, same under similar circumstances; ‘face-value’ or whether the measure logically represents what it is supposed to represent 2) Interpretation: unambiguous interpretation; distinguish between desired and undesired consequences
Economical – Collection and processing should provide benefits that off-set the burden of measurement activities
Complete – Measures should address all areas of concern in enough detail to discern reasons for differences in actual and expected system results
Measurable – hold for Measurement Theory conditions; within a given context if the measure can be feasibly obtained with available resources (i.e. operational )
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BackgroundEBO Overview
Effects-based Operations (EBO) Theory for the employment of capabilities in dynamic and uncertain
environments in a manner to best attain objectives Provides a conceptual framework for determining the integration and
application of capabilities to achieve specific effects to influence the environment of interest yielding desired outcomes
Key tenets Focus on end outcomes Reduced emphasis on weapon systems De-emphasis on destruction as a sole means of achieving effects
“You begin with the objectives that indicate what you really care about. Then you follow simple logical reasoning processes to identify the mechanisms by which the objectives can be achieved. Finally, for each mechanism, you create alternatives by asking what control you have over that mechanism.”
Keeney, Ralph, Value Focused Thinking: A Path to Creative Decision Making, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 1992.
Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted. – ALBERT EINSTEIN, 1879 – 1955
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Planning – focus on desired end-state; develop strategy (who, what, where, why, when, and how) Employment – efficient employment of capabilities; increased emphasis on non-lethal means Assessment – determining if the intended effects were achieved and if they are shaping the desired outcomes
BackgroundEBO Overview
Empl
oym
ent
Ass
essm
ent
Plan
ning
Effects-based Operationsmeasures
measures
measures
measures
measures
measures
measures
measures
measures
measures
measures
measures
Measures of Effectiveness – tie pillars together; provide feedback on strategy progress towards desired end-state
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BackgroundEffects Overview
Effect Consequence or result of a particular action
TacticalOperational
StrategicLevel
PhysicalFunctionalSystemic
Psychological
Domain
PermanentNon-temporalPersistence
PositiveNegativeResult
IntendedUn-intended (Collateral)Intent
CascadingCumulativeImpact
ParallelSequentialTiming
Direct (First-order)Indirect (Higher-order)Order
TypesAttribute
TacticalOperational
StrategicLevel
PhysicalFunctionalSystemic
Psychological
Domain
PermanentNon-temporalPersistence
PositiveNegativeResult
IntendedUn-intended (Collateral)Intent
CascadingCumulativeImpact
ParallelSequentialTiming
Direct (First-order)Indirect (Higher-order)Order
TypesAttribute Effect System state change Attribute Types
Order Direct (First-order)Indirect (Higher-order)
Timing ParallelSequential
Impact CascadingCumulative
Intent IntendedUn-intended (Collateral)
Result PositiveNegative
Persistence PermanentTemporal
Domain
PhysicalFunctionalSystemic
Psychological
LevelTactical
OperationalStrategic
System
SystemBoundary
Input
Input
Input
Input
Input
Input
Input
Input
Input
Input
Mechanism
Effect
DirectParallelIntendedPositivePhysical
Effect
DirectParallelIntendedPositiveFunctional
Effect
DirectParallelIntendedNegativePsychological
Effect
DirectParallelIntendedPositivePsychological
Effect
DirectSequentialIntendedPositiveFunctional
Tactical
Effect
IndirectParallelIntendedPositiveFunctional
Effect
IndirectUnintendedNegativePsychological
Effect
IndirectParallelIntendedPositivePsychological
Effect
IndirectSequentialCascadingIntendedPositiveFunctional
Effect
IndirectUnintendedPositiveFunctional
Operational
Effect
IndirectSequentialCascadingIntendedPositiveFunctional
Effect
IndirectSequentialCascadingUnintendedPositiveFunctional
Effect
IndirectCascadingUnintendedNegativePsychological
Effect
IndirectSequentialCumulativeIntendedPositiveSystemic
Effect
IndirectUnintendedNegativePsychological
Strategic
Input
Input
Input
Behavior
Effect
IndirectParallelIntendedPositiveFunctional
Effect
IndirectUnintendedNegativePsychological
Effect
IndirectParallelCumulativeIntendedPositiveSystemic
Input
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ApproachDefinitions
The beginning of wisdom is calling things by their right names.– CONFUCIUS, 551 – 479 B.C.
DEFINITION 1: A SYSTEM is a set of elements where relationships exist between the elements and the SYSTEM has a purpose or normative behavior.
DEFINITION 2: A system ELEMENT, or SUBSYSTEM, is a system providing functionality or support to a parent system.
DEFINITION 3: A MODEL is a formal image of an empirical structure.
DEFINITION 4: An ATTRIBUTE, or NODE, is a characteristic, feature, or property of a system that is directly or indirectly observable.
DEFINITION 5: A MEASURE is a model of an attribute.
DEFINITION 6: A MEASUREMENT, or observation, is a particular manifestation, or instantiation, of an attribute.
DEFINITION 7: A system STATE is a particular instantiation of all system attributes, or state variables, at a particular point in time.
DEFINITION 8: An EFFECT is a system state change.
DEFINITION 9: EFFECTIVENESS gauges the magnitude of a system state change.
DEFINITION 10:An END-STATE characterizes the desired measurements for all system attributes, or state variables.
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ApproachProduct Structure
m
i 1
1. System Identification• Determines system boundary• Covers all pertinent aspects of desired end-state
2. Sub-system Identification• Decomposes into smaller parts• Only relevant sub-systems are needed
3. Sub-system Importance• Discerns relative importance among selected sub-systems• Amounts to weighting each sub-system
4. Attribute (Node) Identification• Characterizes each sub-system by its salient features• Only attributes relevant to context are needed
5. Attribute (Node) Importance• Discerns relative importance among selected attributes (nodes)• Amounts to weighting each attribute (node)
6. Measure Development• Quantification of attributes (nodes)• Constructed measures may be needed• Measures should hold for metric properties
Product Structure Development Process Empirical System
Formal System(model or product structure)
System
Sub-system1 Sub-systemn
n
i 1
sub-systemweight = 1
Attribute1 Attributemattributeweight = 1
Measure1 MeasuremMeasureq
q
i 1measure = 1
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ApproachConcepts
EmpiricalSystem
A
FormalSystem
(or Model)xA
xA
EmpiricalSystem
A = < a1,…, an >
Element(Subsystem)
ai
FormalSystem
(or Model)xA = < x1, x2,…, xn-1, xn >
xA
x1 xnxn-1x2
System
Elements(Subsystems)
Attribute(Node)
Link
1 mn-12
Attributes(Nodes)
ά1 άmάn-1ά2Measures
Measurements(Observations)
Timet t = 0
SystemMeasurement xA = < 0, 0,…, 0, 0 >
Input
t = T
Mechanism
xA
x1 xnxn-1x2
1 mn-12
ά1 άmάn-1ά2
Measurements(Observations)
xA = < .2, .7,…, .3, .5 >
Effect(of inputt = 0 at t = T)
Effectiveness(of inputt = 0 at t = T)
t = TEnd-state
xA
x1 xnxn-1x2
1 mn-12
ά1 άmάn-1ά2
Measurements(Observations)
xA = < 1, 1,…, 1, 1 >
Count what is countable, measure what is measurable, and what is not measurable, make measurable...– GALILEO GALILEI, 1564 – 1642
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Takeaways Measurement turns real-world system behavior into a set of ‘vital signs’ for the
purpose of monitoring the system Measurement Theory provides a robust basis for turning qualitative observations
into quantitative data Effectiveness vs. Efficiency
Measure of Effectiveness (MOE) External measure Invariant to means of achievement Are we doing the right things?
Measure of Performance (MOP) Internal measure Coupled to means of achievement Are we doing things right?
EBO is an instantiation of an existing, structured, decision-theoretic framework (VFT) for approaching problems with abstract or ill-defined objectives
An effect is a system state change Effectiveness gauges the magnitude of the change
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Questions&
DiscussionA prudent question is one-half of wisdom.
– SIR FRANCIS BACON, 1561 – 1626