Classifying Information Technologies: A Multidimensional Scaling Approach
About: This article is published in Communications of The Ais. The article was published on 01 Jan 2010. and is currently open access. The article focuses on the topics: Multidimensional scaling.
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Citations
A public value perspective for ICT enabled public sector reforms: A theoretical reflection
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TL;DR: The public value paradigm is argued to be an alternative way of framing the nature of the problems faced when ICT enabled public sector reforms are initiated and studied and proposes a new and richer context in which to study and research these phenomena.
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Managing e-Government: value positions and relationships
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Stakeholder theory for the E-government context: Framing a value-oriented normative core
TL;DR: The gap between the expected benefits and the actual benefits of using ICT in the public sector is expected to widen in the coming years.
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Characteristics of IT artifacts: a systems thinking-based framework for delineating and theorizing IT artifacts
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TL;DR: A framework that can be utilized as a language for articulating and theorizing the ITA in IS research is developed, which builds on the multi‐faceted theoretical paradigm of systems thinking from which several concepts are derived and appropriate them to the context at hand, resulting in a seven‐dimensional framework of characteristics for ITAs.
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Citizen engagement in co-creation of e-government services: a process theory view from a meta-synthesis approach
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References
A typology of deviant workplace behaviors: a multidimensional scaling study
TL;DR: In this paper, a typology of deviant workplace behaviors using multidimensional scaling techniques was developed, and it was found that employee deviance appears to fall into four distinct categories: production deviance, property deviances, political deviance and personal aggression.
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Research Commentary: Desperately Seeking the IT in IT Research--A Call to Theorizing the IT Artifact
TL;DR: It is proposed that IS researchers begin to theorize specifically about IT artifacts, and then incorporate these theories explicitly into their studies, and believe that such a research direction is critical if IS research is to make a significant contribution to the understanding of a world increasingly suffused with ubiquitous, interdependent, and emergent information technologies.
The Technology Acceptance Model: Past, Present, and Future
TL;DR: The technology acceptance model (TAM), introduced in 1986, continues to be the most widely applied theoretical model in the IS field and cautiously predicts its future trajectory.
The identity crisis within the is discipline: defining and communicating the discipline's core properties
Izak Benbasat,Robert W. Zmud +1 more
TL;DR: This commentary begins by discussing why establishing an identity for the IS field is important, and describes what such an identity may look like by proposing a core set of properties, i.e., concepts and phenomena, that define theIS field.
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