Dorothea Jacqueline (Dorien) DeTombe (born 1947) is a Dutch sociologist and former academic at the Utrecht University and the Delft University of Technology, known for her contributions in the field of methodology for societal complexity. [1] [2]
DeTombe studied social science and computer science at the Utrecht University. She received her doctorate in 1994 in the field of methodology for Societal Complexity on the COMPRAM Methodology under supervision of Harm 't Hart with the thesis, entitled "Defining complex interdisciplinary societal problems : a theoretical study for constructing a co-operative problem analyzing method: the method COMPRAM".
DeTombe started her academic career at the Radboud University Nijmegen, and spent her main career as a scientist at Utrecht University and at Delft University of Technology at its School for Systems Engineering, Policy Analysis and Management, and as a visiting professor abroad. She gives lectures on the subject of Methodology of Societal Complexity as visiting professor and at conferences all over the world.
DeTombe has organized yearly conferences on the topic of Methodology of Societal Complexity. She built a multidisciplinary International Research Group on Societal Complexity in Europe, North America, and Africa. She has been president of the International Research Society on Methodology of Societal Complexity.
DeTombe research interests concern the subject of how to handle complex problems in the area of Global safety. She has published over 100 articles and many books, some of them together with her colleagues Cor van Dijkum and Elmar Stuhler.
DeTombe developed the methodology COMPRAM (Complex Problem Handling Methodology), a multi disciplined methodology for political decision making on complex societal issues like sustainable development, floods, hurricanes, large city problems, terrorism, HIV/AIDS, Sars and water affairs and economic problems like the credit crisis. The COMPRAM methodology is advised by the OECD (July 2006) to handle Global Safety.
Articles, a selection:
System of systems is a collection of task-oriented or dedicated systems that pool their resources and capabilities together to create a new, more complex system which offers more functionality and performance than simply the sum of the constituent systems. Currently, systems of systems is a critical research discipline for which frames of reference, thought processes, quantitative analysis, tools, and design methods are incomplete. The methodology for defining, abstracting, modeling, and analyzing system of systems problems is typically referred to as system of systems engineering.
The TU Delft Faculty of Technology, Policy and Management is a faculty for graduation and post-graduation studies in Technology, Policy and Management of the Delft University of Technology. Through internationally oriented education and research the faculty want to contribute with "sustainable solutions to complex social problems". The research of the faculty focuses on "large scale socio-technical systems, such as infrastructures for transport, energy and telecommunication".
M.J. (Marc) de Vries, is professor of Reformational Philosophy at the Delft University of Technology.
Otto Selz was a German psychologist from Munich, Bavaria, who formulated the first non-associationist theory of thinking, in 1913. Influenced by the German phenomenological tradition, Selz used the method of introspection, but unlike his predecessors, his theory developed without the use of images and associations. Wilhelm Wundt used the method of introspection in the 1880s, but thought that higher-level mental processes could not be studied in the scientific laboratory.
Mecanoo is an architecture firm based in Delft, Netherlands. Mecanoo was founded in 1984 by Francine Houben, Henk Döll, Roelf Steenhuis, Erick van Egeraat and Chris de Weijer.
Henk Gerard Sol is a Dutch organizational theorist and Emeritus Professor of Business Engineering and ICT at Groningen University. His research focuses on the development of services enabled by ICT, management information systems, decision enhancement and telematics.
The technological innovation system is a concept developed within the scientific field of innovation studies which serves to explain the nature and rate of technological change. A Technological Innovation System can be defined as ‘a dynamic network of agents interacting in a specific economic/industrial area under a particular institutional infrastructure and involved in the generation, diffusion, and utilization of technology’.
Hendrik Berend Dorgelo was a Dutch physicist and academic. He was the first rector magnificus of the Technische Hogeschool Eindhoven.
Christa Muth is a German systems scientist, management professor and management consultant. She spent most of her life in Switzerland and is notable for emphasizing the importance of the intangible aspects in organizations and in business strategies. She coined the term “Human Systems Engineering” and gave it to a Master of Advanced Studies Program she developed at the HES-SO. After she handed over the direction of this program to a successor, she developed a new area of interest in the field of “societal innovation."
Systems-oriented design (S.O.D.) uses system thinking in order to capture the complexity of systems addressed in design practice. The main mission of S.O.D. is to build the designers' own interpretation and implementation of systems thinking. S.O.D. aims at enabling systems thinking to fully benefit from design thinking and practice, and design thinking and practice to fully benefit from systems thinking. S.O.D. addresses design for human activity systems, and can be applied to any kind of design problem ranging from product design and interaction design, through architecture to decision making processes and policy design.
Johannes "Hans" van der Zouwen is a Dutch sociologist, and Emeritus Professor of Social Research Methodology at the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam, known for his pioneering work with Felix Geyer in the field of sociocybernetics.
Roelf Johannes (Roel) Wieringa is a Dutch computer scientist who was a Professor of Information Systems at the University of Twente, specialized in the "integration of formal and informal specification and design techniques".
Josephus Johannes Cornelis Maria (Joop) Hox is a Dutch psychologist and Professor of Social Science Methodology at the Utrecht University, known for his work in the field of social research method such as survey research and multilevel modeling.
Edith Desiree de Leeuw is a Dutch psychologist, statistician, research methodologist, and professor in survey methodology and survey quality, at the University of Utrecht. She is known for her work in the field of survey research.
Cornelis Johannes (Cor) van Dijkum is a Dutch sociologist, consultant and academic at the Utrecht University, known for his contributions in the field of methodology for complex societal problems.
Problem structuring methods (PSMs) are a group of techniques used to model or to map the nature or structure of a situation or state of affairs that some people want to change. PSMs are usually used by a group of people in collaboration to create a consensus about, or at least to facilitate negotiations about, what needs to change. Some widely adopted PSMs include soft systems methodology, the strategic choice approach, and strategic options development and analysis (SODA).
Marileen Dogterom is a Dutch biophysicist and professor at the Kavli Institute of Nanoscience at Delft University of Technology. She published in Science, Cell, and Nature and is notable for her research of the cell cytoskeleton. For this research, she was awarded the 2018 Spinoza Prize.
Maria Grazia Speranza is an Italian applied mathematician and operations researcher. Her research involves the application of mathematical optimization to problems including portfolio optimization and the combination of inventory management with vehicle routing.
Karma Dajani is a Lebanese-Dutch mathematician whose research interests include ergodic theory, probability theory, and their applications in number theory. She is an associate professor of mathematics at Utrecht University.
Hendrik (Henk) Koppelaar is a Dutch computer scientist and emeritus professor at the Delft University of Technology, knows for his work in knowledge engineering.