Monday, February 15, 2010

HUMAN–COMPUTER INTERACTION AND MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS: FOUNDATIONS



CONTENTS
Series Editor’s Introduction
Vladimir Zwass vii
Foreword
Ben Shneiderman ix
1. Foundations of Human-Computer Interaction in Management Information Systems:
An Introduction 1
Ping Zhang and Dennis Galletta
Part I. Disciplinary Perspectives and the Users
2. Information Interactions: Bridging Disciplines in the Creation of New Technologies
Andrew Dillon 21
3. HCI as MIS
Adrienne Olnick Kutzschan and Jane Webster 32
4. Who Is the User? Individuals, Groups, Communities
Gerardine DeSanctis 48
Part II. IT Development: Theories of Individual and Group Work
5. Advancing the Theory of DSS Design for User Calibration
George M. Kasper and Francis K. Andoh-Baidoo 61
6. Decisional Guidance: Broadening the Scope
Mark S. Silver 90
7. Coordination Theory: A Ten-Year Retrospective
Kevin Crowston, Joseph Rubleske, and James Howison 120
Part III. IT Development: Theories of Fit
8. The Theory of Cognitive Fit: One Aspect of a General Theory of Problem Solving?
Iris Vessey 141
9. Task-Technology Fit: A Critical (But Often Missing!) Construct in Models
of Information Systems and Performance
Dale L. Goodhue 184
10. Designs That Fit: An Overview of Fit Conceptualizations in HCI
Dov Te’eni 205
Part IV. IT Use and Impact: Beliefs and Behavior
11. Computer Self-Efficacy: A Review
Deborah Compeau, Jane Gravill, Nicole Haggerty, and Helen Kelley 225
12. Behavioral Information Security: An Overview, Results, and Research Agenda
Jeffrey M. Stanton, Kathryn R. Stam, Paul M. Mastrangelo, and Jeffrey A. Jolton 262
13. Interpreting Security in Human-Computer Interactions: A Semiotic Analysis
Gurpreet Dhillon and Jeffrey May 281
Part V. IT Use and Impact: Affect, Aesthetics, Value, and Socialization
14. The Role of Affect in Information Systems Research: A Critical Survey
and a Research Model
Heshan Sun and Ping Zhang 295
15. Aesthetics in Information Technology: Motivation and Future Research Directions
Noam Tractinsky 330
16. Value Sensitive Design and Information Systems
Batya Friedman, Peter H. Kahn, Jr., and Alan Borning 348
17. Socializing Consistency: From Technical Homogeneity to Human Epitome
Clifford Nass, Leila Takayama, and Scott Brave 373
Part VI. Reflections
18. On the Relationship Between HCI and Technology Acceptance Research
Fred D. Davis 395
19. Human Factors, CHI, and MIS
Jonathan Grudin 402
Editors and Contributors 423
Series Editor 431
Index 433

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