Is it insightful or trivial to note that a common contributing factor in incidents is "something somebody didn't know"?
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Replying to @lhochstein
Neither insightful or trivial, IMO.
To be sure, it's counterfactual.1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes -
Replying to @allspaw
Huh? Would you consider a common ground breakdown to be a counterfactual? I think of them in the category of something somebody didn't know (e.g., Alice didn't know that Bob didn't know that ...), and I don't think of common ground breakdowns as counterfactual reasoning.
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Replying to @lhochstein
It's a counterfactual if it's being listed as a contributor. I think it's definitely important to include them as part of an analysis write up, but conditions/circumstances that allow (or encourage!) FCGBs to happen are IMO more useful. If that makes sense?
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Replying to @lhochstein @allspaw
Idk for F but i would say Common Ground Breakdown
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Yeah, the F is what I'm wondering as well.
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I mean I know what F _usually_ stands for in acronyms. RTFM, FUBAR…
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John Allspaw Retweeted John Allspaw
:) https://twitter.com/allspaw/status/926503989629411328?s=21 …https://twitter.com/allspaw/status/926503989629411328 …
John Allspaw added,
0 replies 0 retweets 3 likesThanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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