Clinical Organizational Science (COS) and Implementation Science: Differences and Complementarity with CFIR

DroR Inc. has published a paper in 'Frontiers in Psychology' on 'Clinical Organizational Science (COS),' which integrates complex systems science and neuroscience. The paper clarifies the complementary relationship between COS and the 'Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR).' While CFIR excels in diagnosing implementation factors, COS theorizes intervention mechanisms for interaction structures. Combining them allows for more precise research design and validation of organizational change.
businessNQ 49/100出典:PR Times

📋 Article Processing Timeline

  • 📰 Published: May 27, 2026 at 10:00
  • 🔍 Collected: May 31, 2026 at 23:03 (109h 3m after Published)
  • 🤖 AI Analyzed: June 2, 2026 at 05:12 (30h 9m after Collected)
CFIR excels in diagnosing implementation factors and contextual conditions, while COS theorizes the intervention mechanisms for interaction structures within those contexts. DroR Inc. (Headquarters: Shibuya-ku, Tokyo; CEO: Makoto Yamanaka), a research and practice firm that observes and designs the 'invisible interaction structures' of organizations based on complex systems science and neuroscience, has published the paper 'Clinical Organizational Science: An Integrative Framework for Structural Intervention in Complex Organizations' in the Organizational Psychology section of the international academic journal 'Frontiers in Psychology.' The English news release for this paper was distributed via EurekAlert!, and the overall problem statement of COS has been featured on the international science news site Phys.org. This release organizes the differences between CFIR and COS, as well as their complementary relationship with implementation science. This release is part of the Clinical Organizational Science (COS) commentary series distributed from May 7 to June 5. This installment addresses the positioning of CFIR (Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research) and COS, organizing how COS connects with existing theories, where it expands, and what verifiable questions it presents.

FAQ

How can Taiwanese firms benefit from COS?

By scientifically analyzing organizational interaction structures, firms can gain a theoretical foundation to successfully implement change projects.