109 research outputs found
Unlearning Ineffective or Obsolete Technologies
Often, before they can learn something new, people have to unlearn what they think they
already know. That is, they may have to discover that they should no longer rely on their current beliefs
and methods. This paper describes eight viewpoints that can help people to do this.Information Systems Working Papers Serie
KNOWLEDGE AND INFORMATION WORK IN ORGANIZATIONS
Since the turn of the century, the United States, Canada, and Western Europe have
been moving toward service and information economies and away from an agricultural and
manufacturing economies (Euromonitor, 1990; Machlup, 1962; Rubin and Huber, 1986;
Porat, 1977). The fraction of workers using information to produce economic value has
been rising, and the fraction working with their hands in factories or on farms has been
declining. In the United States, the percentage of jobs in manufacturing fell from 27
percent in 1920 to 17 percent in 1990. In the European Community, the value-added by
manufacturing grew at an average annual rate of 6.2 percent from 1960 to 1970, but this
growth rate was only 0.7 percent from 1980 to 1985. Among white-collar workers, the
fastest growing occupations have been clerical, professional, and technical workers, and
managers and administrators (Wolff and Baumol, 1987).
Six factors have been involved in this shift. First, third-world and developing
societies have become centers of manufacturing, while the so-called advanced societies
have shifted toward services. In Europe, the telecommunications sector has been growing
about 9 to 11 percent annually, and the software and computing services sector has been
growing 15 to 20 percent annually (Sema Group, 1991). Second, knowledge-intense and
information-intense products and services have grown rapidly, and the production of
traditional products has also been using knowledge more intensively. Third, business has
invested heavily in equipment to support information work. In the United States,
information-related equipment accounted for 20 percent of capital investment in 1979; this
figure had become 40 percent of capital investment by 1986. Fourth, knowledge workers
and information workers have replaced manual production workers within the
manufacturing sectors. Machine-tool operators, for instance, have often been replaced by
technicians who monitor computer-controlled machine tools. Fifth, workers have
increased education and information-processing skills (Howell and Wolff 1991). Sixth,
new kinds of knowledge-intense and information-intense organizations have emerged that
are devoted entirely to the production, processing, and distribution of information. These new kinds of organizations employ millions of people (Office of Technology Assessment,
1988).
As early as 1976, the value of information-sector products and services had
already exceeded that of the manufacturing sector in the U. S. By 1990, the information
sector (including services) accounted for 4 of GNP, and over half of the
U. S. workers were doing some type of information work (Howell and Wolff, 1993;
Roach, 1988). The U. S., however, represents an extreme case. For instance, in the
software and computing services sector, the United States has about 55 percent of the
world market, the European Community has about 25 percent, and Japan has about 8
percent (Sema Group, 199 1).
This article surveys information work, information workers, and the computer
systems that support such work. It then examines the organizations that are most
dependent on knowledge and information work -- knowledge-intensive firms.Information Systems Working Papers Serie
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Opening Pandora's Box: Studying the Accuracy of Managers' Perceptions
Both researchers and managers depend on the accuracy of managers' perceptions. Yet, few studies compare subjective with
"objective" data, perhaps because it is very difficult to do well. These difficulties also muddy interpretations of results. On
one hand, studies suggest that managers' perceptions may be very inaccurate. On the other hand, the observed errors in
managerial perceptions may arise from research methods instead of managers.
Because perceptual data are so significant for both researchers and managers, researchers need to understand both the
potential contaminants of perceptual research and the determinants of perceptual errors and biases. This article reviews
studies of the accuracies of managers' perceptions, points out hazards in such research, and suggests various ways to
improve studies of perceptions. The suggestions encompass improvements in gathering more valid subjective data, locating
more appropriate "objective" data, finding appropriate respondents, and using statistical methods that provide accurate and
reliable estimates with small samples.Information Systems Working Papers Serie
Unlearning Ineffective or Obsolete Technologies
Often, before they can learn something new, people have to unlearn what they think they
already know. That is, they may have to discover that they should no longer rely on their current beliefs
and methods. This paper describes eight viewpoints that can help people to do this.Information Systems Working Papers Serie
Opening Pandora's Box: Studying the Accuracy of Managers' Perceptions
Both researchers and managers depend on the accuracy of managers' perceptions. Yet, few studies compare subjective with
"objective" data, perhaps because it is very difficult to do well. These difficulties also muddy interpretations of results. On
one hand, studies suggest that managers' perceptions may be very inaccurate. On the other hand, the observed errors in
managerial perceptions may arise from research methods instead of managers.
Because perceptual data are so significant for both researchers and managers, researchers need to understand both the
potential contaminants of perceptual research and the determinants of perceptual errors and biases. This article reviews
studies of the accuracies of managers' perceptions, points out hazards in such research, and suggests various ways to
improve studies of perceptions. The suggestions encompass improvements in gathering more valid subjective data, locating
more appropriate "objective" data, finding appropriate respondents, and using statistical methods that provide accurate and
reliable estimates with small samples.Information Systems Working Papers Serie
Using machine learning to infer reasoning provenance from user interaction log data: based on the data/frame theory of sensemaking
The reconstruction of analysts’ reasoning processes (reasoning provenance) during complex sensemaking tasks can support reflection and decision making. One potential approach to such reconstruction is to automatically infer reasoning from low-level user interaction logs. We explore a novel method for doing this using machine learning. Two user studies were conducted in which participants performed similar intelligence analysis tasks. In one study, participants used a standard web browser and word processor; in the other, they used a system called INVISQUE (Interactive Visual Search and Query Environment). Interaction logs were manually coded for cognitive actions based on captured think-aloud protocol and posttask interviews based on Klein, Phillips, Rall, and Pelusos’s data/frame model of sensemaking as a conceptual framework. This analysis was then used to train an interaction frame mapper, which employed multiple machine learning models to learn relationships between the interaction logs and the codings. Our results show that, for one study at least, classification accuracy was significantly better than chance and compared reasonably to a reported manual provenance reconstruction method. We discuss our results in terms of variations in feature sets from the two studies and what this means for the development of the method for provenance capture and the evaluation of sensemaking systems
Collegial nests can Foster Critical Thinking, Innovative Ideas, and Scientific Progress.
How can management and strategy scholars organize to generate more productive, more innovative, and more impactful research? With appropriate cultures and leaders, small and egalitarian discussion groups that we call “collegial nests” can become powerful generators of innovative ideas and creators of extraordinary scholars. Collegial nests need cultures that free participants to think critically, to cherish new viewpoints, and to speak freely without fear of ridicule. They also need leaders who model such cultures and facilitate frequent discussions. Two case examples illustrate how productive collegial nests can create better science and better scientists. To generate scientific innovation and progress on a large scale, many autonomous groups tackling related issues are desirable. Modern communication technology is making it feasible for groups to operate over large distances and to coordinate with each other at very low cost. Collegial nests offer greater potential for enhancing scholarly productivity and innovation than do attempts to regulate scholarship via hierarchical structures. Multiplicity can lower the probability of wasting resources on low-yield paths, egalitarian control can reduce the influence of vested interests, and a combination of shared goals and partial autonomy can integrate enthusiasm with sensible risk taking
Reputation and identity conflict in management consulting
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via the DOI in this record.Based on a case study of a large consulting firm, this paper makes two contributions to the literature on reputation and identity by examining how an organization responds when its identity is substantially misaligned with the experience and perceptions of external stakeholders that form the basis of reputational judgments. First, rather than triggering some form of identity adaptation, it outlines how other forms of identity can come into play to remediate this gap, buffering the organization’s identity from change. This shift to other individual identities is facilitated by a low organizational identity context even when the identity of the firm is coherent and strong. The second contribution concerns the conceptualization of consulting and other professional service firms. We explain how reputation and identity interact in the context of the distinctive organizational features of these firms. Notably, their loosely coupled structure and the central importance of expert knowledge claims enable individual consultants both to reinforce and supplement corporate reputation via individual identity work
The constant causes of never-ending faddishness in the behavioral and social sciences
Summary The history of the behavioral and social sciences contains endless sequences of conceptual and methodological fads. Disappointed with the results of their current concepts and methods, researchers pursue new topics or approaches in the hope that they will bring better results. In time, however, the new fads too disappoint. The wide spread and persistence of disappointment evidence the influence of common and fundamental misbeliefs about scientific methodology. This article points to the detrimental effects of four specific misbeliefs: that research lends itself to mass production, that mechanistic descriptions adequately portray behavioral and social processes, that generalizations ought to be broad, and that statistical methods provide useful insights even if researchers misuse them. Detrimental ideas such as these can survive scrutiny and evaluation because researchers cannot agree about what effective research looks like. Lacking reliable indicators of research effectiveness, researchers both flit capriciously from one idea to another and adhere stubbornly to unproductive ideas.Research Theories Methodology Knowledge
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