What is cognitive friction in operations?
Cognitive friction in operations is the extra mental effort and uncertainty created by the way tools, workflows and policies are designed, on top of the inherent complexity of the work itself.
Operations teams live inside long chains of decisions, alerts and trade‑offs. Most tools try to optimise throughput and efficiency – but they rarely account for the cognitive friction they generate, especially for neurodivergent people and other “non‑median” nervous systems.
This page collects my ongoing work on cognitive friction in operations: how dashboards, processes and policies feel from the inside, how they fail in everyday use, and how we can redesign them so both systems and people become more stable over time.
Cognitive friction in operations is the accumulated mental effort, switching cost and uncertainty that comes from working inside complex, multi‑stakeholder systems. It shows up in places like:
For neurodivergent workers – and for anyone operating under sustained load – this friction is not a minor UX issue. It is often the difference between being able to do good work sustainably, burning out quietly, or disappearing from the system altogether. [stephaniewalter]
I study cognitive friction in real operations environments – supply chains, service systems, internal platforms – from both sides: the system and the nervous system. I map how tools, processes and incentives are supposed to work; I then talk to the people actually using them, trace breakdowns and workarounds, and turn those insights into concrete changes in dashboards, workflows and protocols.
Over time, this work becomes a library of patterns: recurring friction points, design anti‑patterns, and practical ways to reduce load without pretending constraints don’t exist.
If you run operations, internal tooling or platform teams, this concept is not a thought experiment. It is a way to:
I use this lens in my product and UX work for supply‑chain and service organisations, and in my independent research programme on neurodivergent operations.
Cognitive friction in operations is the extra mental effort and uncertainty created by the way tools, workflows and policies are designed, on top of the inherent complexity of the work itself.
Neurodivergent workers often experience higher sensitivity to overload, ambiguity and conflicting rules. Cognitive friction can push them to constantly override their own nervous systems just to function at work, which is unsustainable and often invisible to management. [stephaniewalter]
I combine qualitative research (interviews, shadowing, diary studies) with operational data and log analysis to trace where work actually gets stuck, and how people compensate for tool and process gaps. [indeed]
I collaborate with operations, internal tools and UX teams to audit current dashboards and workflows, run focused studies on cognitive friction, and design practical changes to reduce load while respecting real constraints.