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Special Issue Paper

Causal maps and the evaluation of decision options—a review

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Pages 779-791 | Received 01 Nov 2004, Accepted 01 Feb 2006, Published online: 21 Dec 2017
 

Abstract

Causal maps are widely employed in problem-structuring interventions. They permit a rich representation of ideas, through the modelling of complex chains of argument as networks. The last stage of a problem-structuring intervention is often to identify and agree to a set of potential strategic options. In some circumstances the preferred direction may emerge naturally from a process of negotiation; in others further, more-or-less formal, analysis to evaluate the options and to understand their impacts on the goals could be helpful. Such analysis may help to bring closure to the process. The main aim of this paper is to review systematically the approaches for evaluating options following from the use of a causal map for problem structuring; some directly using the map structure, others working with concepts extracted from, or an external model derived from, the map. Following a proposed taxonomy, each approach is presented, and its advantages and disadvantages are discussed.

Acknowledgements

We thank the two anonymous referees for their insightful and valuable comments; and are grateful to the Modelling Strategic Problems group for the inspiring discussions which helped to set the focus of this paper.

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