ABSTRACT

"Human-Computer Interaction and Management Information Systems: Applications" offers state-of-the-art research by a distinguished set of authors who span the MIS and HCI fields. The original chapters provide authoritative commentaries and in-depth descriptions of research programs that will guide 21st century scholars, graduate students, and industry professionals. Human-Computer Interaction (or Human Factors) in MIS is concerned with the ways humans interact with information, technologies, and tasks, especially in business, managerial, organizational, and cultural contexts. It is distinctive in many ways when compared with HCI studies in other disciplines. The MIS perspective affords special importance to managerial and organizational contexts by focusing on analysis of tasks and outcomes at a level that considers organizational effectiveness. With the recent advancement of technologies and development of many sophisticated applications, human-centeredness in MIS has become more critical than ever before. This work focuses on applications and evaluations including special case studies, specific contexts or tasks, HCI methodological concerns, and the use and adoption process.

part |2 pages

Part II. Collaboration Support

part |2 pages

Part IV. Learning and Training

chapter 10|11 pages

Technology-Based Training: Toward a Learner-Centric Research Agenda

BySharath Sasidharan, Radhika Santhanam

chapter 11|26 pages

Developing Training Strategies with an HCI Perspective

ByLorne Olfman, Robert P. Bostrom, Maung K. Sein

chapter 12|27 pages

The Learning Objects Economy: What Remains to Be Done?

ByConrad Shayo, Lorne Olfman

part |2 pages

Part V. User-Centered IS Development

part |2 pages

Part VII. Methodological Issues and Reflections

chapter 17|21 pages

Conducting Experimental Research in HCI: From Topic Selection to Publication

ByAlan R. Dennis, Monica J. Garfield, Heikki Topi, Joseph S. Valacich

chapter 18|9 pages

Soft Versus Hard: The Essential Tension

ByJohn M. Carroll