Performer Readiness: A Multidimensional Framework for Understanding Human Performance Degradation in High-Stakes Occupational Contexts

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Abstract

Human performance failures in high-stakes occupational settings—healthcare, aviation, emergency response, and industrial operations—frequently prompt interventions targeting individual behavior, training, or motivation. This article proposes an alternative analytical framework centered on performer readiness: the constellation of cognitive, physiological, emotional, and motivational states that determine whether individuals can effectively deploy their existing competencies in demanding moments. Synthesizing research from occupational health psychology, human factors engineering, cognitive science, stress physiology, and organizational behavior, I develop a multidimensional model distinguishing four core readiness dimensions and examine their interactions, temporal dynamics, and assessment challenges. The framework provides conceptual tools for diagnosing performance problems more accurately, designing interventions that address root causes rather than surface manifestations, and reconceptualizing organizational responsibility for human performance outcomes. I present concrete case illustrations demonstrating multilevel analysis, articulate boundary conditions for framework application, and discuss ethical considerations in implementation. This integrative synthesis extends existing theoretical models by focusing on momentary state accessibility rather than stable capacities, systematically analyzing dimension interactions, and providing diagnostic guidance that generates distinctive predictions for practice.

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