Clinical Organizational Science (COS) and Weiner's Theory of Change Readiness: When is an Organization Ready for Change?

Makoto Yamanaka, CEO of DroR Inc., published a paper in 'Frontiers in Psychology' formalizing Clinical Organizational Science (COS). The framework, based on complexity and neuroscience, defines organizational change as 'attractor transition.'
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## Clinical Organizational Science (COS) and Weiner's Theory of Change Readiness

COS repositions Weiner’s Theory of Organizational Change Readiness as the readiness conditions necessary for structural interventions to be effective.

DroR Inc. (Headquarters: Shibuya, Tokyo; CEO: Makoto Yamanaka), a research and practice firm that observes and designs the 'invisible interaction structures' of organizations based on complexity science and neuroscience, has published the paper 'Clinical Organizational Science: An Integrative Framework for Structural Intervention in Complex Organizations' in the international academic journal *Frontiers in Psychology*. This release is part of the Clinical Organizational Science (COS) commentary series distributed from May 7 to June 5.

### Definition of Clinical Organizational Science (COS)

Clinical Organizational Science integrates complexity science, neuroscience, organizational psychology, and behavioral science. It theorizes interaction structures that actively reproduce an organization's stable state and provides a framework for intervening in those structures. COS views organizational change not as individual behavior modification, but as 'organizational attractor transition,' proposing core techniques such as Field Gradient Theory, Loop Conversion Design, and Neural Base Design.

### What is Organizational Change Readiness?

Bryan Weiner's Theory of Organizational Change Readiness captures an organization’s state of preparedness for change from the perspectives of shared commitment and collective efficacy. COS positions the readiness of organization members to participate in new interaction patterns, alongside psychological safety, trust, and feedback acceptance, as structural conditions for readiness.

### Structuring Readiness in COS

COS views readiness not just as a psychological state, but as an interaction structure. 'Neural Base Design' serves as the foundational layer for forming readiness. Through repetitive practices like shared gratitude, body check-ins, and confirmation responses, it creates a state where the organization can withstand structural intervention.

In organizations with low psychological safety, change is easily perceived as a threat; however, in organizations where trust is established, the same structural intervention is more likely to be accepted as an opportunity to change interaction patterns. COS treats this difference as a structural condition of readiness.

FAQ

臨床組織科学(COS)とは何ですか?

複雑系科学、神経科学、組織心理学、行動科学を統合し、組織の安定状態を能動的に再生産する相互作用構造を理論化し、その構造に介入するためのフレームワークです。

COSは組織変革をどのように捉えていますか?

個人の行動変容ではなく、組織アトラクターの遷移として捉えます。

Weinerの組織変革レディネス理論との関係は?

Weinerの理論をCOSの構造的介入条件として再配置し、共有コミットメントと集合的効力感に加え、心理的安全性や組織リズムなどの相互作用構造をレディネス条件として統合しました。

Neural Base Designの役割は何ですか?

感謝共有や身体的チェックイン、確認応答などの反復的実践を通じて、組織が上層の構造的介入に耐えられるレディネス形成の基盤層としての役割を果たします。

本研究の発表媒体は?

国際学術誌『Frontiers in Psychology』のOrganizational Psychologyセクションで公開されました。