six thinking hats
TRANSCRIPT
• Six Thinking Hats
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DMAIC Improve
1 The purpose of this step is to identify, test and implement a solution to the problem; in part or in whole. Identify creative solutions to eliminate the key root causes in order to
fix and prevent process problems. Use brainstorming or techniques like Six
Thinking Hats and Random Word. Some projects can utilize complex analysis tools
like DOE (Design of Experiments), but try to focus on obvious solutions if these are
apparent.https://store.theartofservice.com/the-six-thinking-hats-toolkit.html
Index of psychology articles - S
1 Sadistic personality disorder - Sadomasochism - Safety in numbers - Sander illusion - Sapience - Scale (social sciences) - Schadenfreude - Schedules of reinforcement - Schema (psychology) - Schizoaffective disorder - Schizoid personality disorder - Schizophrenia - Schizophrenics
Anonymous - Schizophreniform disorder - Schizotypal personality disorder - Scholastic Aptitude Test - School phobia - School refusal - Science and Consciousness Review - Scientific control - Seasonal affective disorder - Secondary gain - Security blanket - Selective
abstraction - Selective distortion - Self-actualization - Self-awareness - Self-concept - Self-consciousness - Self-criticism - Self-deception - Self-defeating personality disorder - Self-determination theory - Self-disclosure - Self-efficacy - Self-esteem - Self-esteem functions - Self-help
- Self-injury - Self-knowledge - Self-loathing - Self-monitoring - Self-parenting - Self-perception theory - Self-pity - Self-punishment - Self-realization - Self-regulated learning - Self (Jung) - Self (psychology) - Self actualization - Self control - Self efficacy - Self-esteem - Self handicapping - Self propaganda - Self psychology - Self serving bias - Selfishness - Semantic dementia - Semantic dyslexia - Semantic
memory - Semantics - Senile dementia - Senile plaques - Sensation (psychology) - Sense of time - Sensitivity (human) - Sensory adaptation - Sensory gating - Sensory memory - Sensory neuroscience - Sensory preconditioning - Sensory threshold - Sentience - Separation anxiety disorder - Serial position effect - Serial sevens - Sex-reassignment surgery - Sexual arousal disorders - Sexual arousal - Sexual aversion
disorder - Sexual desire - Sexual deviation - Sexual disorders - Sexual dysfunction - Sexual fetishism - Sexual masochism - Sexual orientation - Sexual response cycle - Sexual sadism - human sexuality - Shadow (psychology) - Shame - Shaping (psychology) - Shellshock - Shock value - Short term memory - Shyness - Sibling - Siege mentality - Sigmund Freud Archives - Silva Method - Similarity (psychology) - Simon effect - Simplicity theory - Simulated consciousness - Simulated pregnancy - Simulation heuristic - Sitophobia - Situational awareness - Six Thinking
Hats - Size-weight illusion - Skinner box - Sleep-learning - Sluggish cognitive tempo - Sluggishly progressing schizophrenia - Smart mob - Sociability - Social anxiety - Social anxiety disorder - Social cognition - Social desirability - Social disruption - Social distance - Social distance scale - Social facilitation - Social group - Social influence - Social inhibition - Social interaction - Social learning theory - Social loafing - Social neuroscience - Social norm - Social proof - Social psychology (psychology) - Social psychology (sociology) - Social rejection - Social rhythm therapy - Social role - Social skills - Social statistics - Social status - Social stigma - Social support - Socialization - Society of Mind theory - Socioeconomic status - Sociometry - Socionics - Sociosexual orientation - Sodomy - Solitary confinement - Soma - Somatization disorder - Somatoform disorder - Somatotherapy - Somatotype and constitutional psychology - Spatial empathy - Spatial memory - Spatial-temporal
reasoning - Speaker recognition - Specific phobia - Specific social phobia - Speech act - Speech perception - Speed reading - Spiral dynamics - splitting (psychology) - Spontaneous recovery - Sport psychology - Stage fright - Stage theory - Stages of faith development - Stanford-
Binet - State-dependent learning - State-dependent memory - Steppingstone theory - Stereotypes - Stereotypic movement disorder - Stigmatic/eligibilic paraphilia - Stimming - Stimulus generalization - Stir crazy (condition) - Stockholm syndrome - Storage (memory) -
Strategic planning - Stream of consciousness (psychology) - Stress (medicine) - Stress management - Stressor - Structural communication - Structural ritualization theory - Structuralism - Structure-agency debate - Structured interview - Study Skills - Subjective reality - Sublimation
(psychology) - Subliminal advertising - Subliminal perception - Submission - Substance-related disorder - Substance abuse - Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration - Substance dependence - Substance intoxication - Substance-related disorder -
Subvocalization - Suffering - Suicidal ideation - Suicide - Suicide treatment - Suicide watch - Suicidology - Superego - Superficial charm - Superiority complex - Superman complex - Superordinate goals - Surprise (emotion) - Swept-plane display - Sycophancy - Syllogism - Sylvia Plath effect - Symbolic violence - Sympathy - Sympathetic nervous system - Synesthesia - Synectics - Systematic desensitization - Systems
psychology - Systems intelligence - Systems thinking
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Lateral thinking - Methods
1 'Disproving': Based on the idea that the majority is always wrong (as suggested by Henrik Ibsen and John Kenneth Galbraith),
take anything that is obvious and generally accepted as goes without saying, question
it, take an opposite view, and try to convincingly disprove it. This technique is similar to de Bono's Black Hat of the Six
Thinking Hats, which looks at the ways in which something will not work.
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Business analysis - de Bono's Six Thinking Hats
1 This is often used in a brainstorming session to generate and analyse ideas and options. It is useful to
encourage specific types of thinking and can be a convenient and
symbolic way to request someone to “switch gears. It involves restricting the group to only thinking in specific ways - giving ideas analysis in the “mood” of the time. Also known as
the Six Thinking Hats.https://store.theartofservice.com/the-six-thinking-hats-toolkit.html
Six Thinking Hats
1 Six Thinking Hats: An Essential Approach to
Business Management
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Six Thinking Hats - Underlying principles
1 Coloured hats are used as metaphors for each direction. Switching to a direction is symbolized by the act of putting on a
coloured hat, either literally or metaphorically. These metaphors allow
for a more complete and elaborate segregation of the thinking directions. The six thinking hats indicate problems and solutions about an idea the thinker
may come up with.
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Six Thinking Hats - Strategies and programs
1 Sequences (and indeed hats) may be used by individuals working alone or in groups.Six Thinking Hats; Official training materials, DeBono Thinking
Systems
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Six Thinking Hats - Parallel thinking
1 In ordinary, unstructured thinking this process is unfocused; the thinker
leaps from critical thinking to neutrality to optimism and so on
without structure or strategy. The Six Thinking Hats process attempts to
introduce parallel thinking.
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Six Thinking Hats - Summary
1 The Six Thinking Hats method could then be used in a sequence to first of all explore the problem, then develop
a set of solutions, and to finally choose a solution through critical examination of the solution set.
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Six Thinking Hats - Usage
1 They tried the “Six Thinking Hats” method of brainstorming, a green hat
for creative ways to attack a problem, a black one to look at the
feasibility of those ideas
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Edward de Bono
1 'Edward de Bono' (born 19 May 1933) is a Maltese people|Maltese
physician, author, inventor and Organizational Psychology|
consultant. He originated the term lateral thinking, wrote the book Six Thinking Hats and is a proponent of
the deliberate teaching of thinking as a subject in schools.
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Coloured hat
1 In the educational theories of Edward de Bono, six coloured hats represent Six Thinking Hats|six thinking states.
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