18 July 2026

Designing Adaptive Thinkers: How Cognitive Interventions Shape Innovation and Decision-Making in Military Organizations

Small Wars Journal | Cara Wrigley, Murray Simons

Military organizations are utilizing structured cognitive interventions, known as epistemic devices, to reshape how personnel frame complex problems, mitigate cognitive bias, and make decisions under extreme uncertainty. These designed activities, which include systems mapping and red-teaming, serve as critical mechanisms to deliberately build and sustain adaptive thinking capabilities across defense institutions.

Traditional military hierarchies and rigid standard operating procedures often suppress dissent and reinforce inherited mental models during exploratory planning phases. To counter this, a taxonomy analysis of over 1,200 design and innovation activities demonstrates that specific tools can successfully minimize cognitive dominance and facilitate distributed reasoning. By externalizing tacit assumptions into shared visual representations, these structured interventions shift tactical discussions from individual opinions to collective, objective, and rigorous inquiry. Ultimately, integrating these cognitive tools into professional military education and long-term capability development frameworks ensures that modern forces maintain a decisive strategic decision-making advantage in highly volatile, multi-domain operational environments.

Comment
Modern warfare demands rapid cognitive adaptation at the tactical edge. Rigid command structures often stifle this necessary flexibility during crisis situations. Defence establishments must institutionalise cognitive red-teaming to challenge orthodox operational assumptions. Failure to reform military education will result in systemic intellectual defeat before physical conflict begins.

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