Intelligence and information management: methods in considering information types for intelligence purposes / Mohd Hafizzuddin Md. Damiri

Of the diverse problems that impede accurate intelligence analysis, those inherent in human mental processes are surely among the most important and most difficult to deal with. Intelligence analysis is fundamentally a mental process, but understanding this process is hindered by the lack of conscio...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Md. Damiri, Mohd Hafizzuddin
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2004
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Online Access:https://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/57031/1/57031.PDF
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Summary:Of the diverse problems that impede accurate intelligence analysis, those inherent in human mental processes are surely among the most important and most difficult to deal with. Intelligence analysis is fundamentally a mental process, but understanding this process is hindered by the lack of conscious awareness of the workings of our own minds. A basic finding in cognitive psychology is that people have no conscious experience of most of what happens in the human mind. Many functions associated with perception, memory and information processing are conducted prior to and independently of any conscious direction. What appears spontaneously in consciousness is the result of thinking, not the process of thinking. Weaknesses and biases inherent in human thinking processes can be demonstrated through carefully designed experiments. They can be alleviated by conscious application of tools and techniques that should be in the analytical tradecraft toolkit of all intelligence analysts.