Making manufacturing practices tacit: A case study of Computer-Aided Production Management and Lean Production

Making manufacturing practices tacit: A case study of Computer-Aided Production Management and Lean Production

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Article ID: iaor19961665
Country: United Kingdom
Volume: 46
Issue: 10
Start Page Number: 1174
End Page Number: 1183
Publication Date: Oct 1995
Journal: Journal of the Operational Research Society
Authors:
Keywords: computers
Abstract:

The idea that operations in batch repetitive manufacturing can be managed using formal manipulations on representations of the manufacturing practice is at the heart of an appraoch called Computer-Aided Production Management. It is argued that the plausibility of this approach arises from certain widely held, but now controversial, views about the nature of purposeful human activity, which assume the need for a central representational model. Alternative theories of cognitive activity can be used to clarify the approach of a recently influential group of production management techniques, known as Lean Production, which attempt to use changes to the situation of production as their leverage point. It is claimed that implementation of these ideas depends on rendering desirable practices tacit, and this idea is illustrated using a case study.

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