Subjects -> LIBRARY AND INFORMATION SCIENCES (Total: 392 journals)
    - DIGITAL CURATION AND PRESERVATION (13 journals)
    - LIBRARY ADMINISTRATION (1 journals)
    - LIBRARY AND INFORMATION SCIENCES (378 journals)

LIBRARY AND INFORMATION SCIENCES (378 journals)                  1 2 | Last

Showing 1 - 200 of 379 Journals sorted by number of followers
Library & Information Science Research     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 1821)
Journal of Librarianship and Information Science     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 1337)
Library Hi Tech     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 1140)
Journal of Information Science     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 1112)
Journal of Academic Librarianship     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 1100)
Library Management     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 977)
The Electronic Library     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 976)
Library Quarterly     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 941)
Global Knowledge, Memory and Communication     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 882)
Journal of Information Literacy     Open Access   (Followers: 858)
Library Hi Tech News     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 789)
Information Technology and Libraries     Open Access   (Followers: 736)
New Library World     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 685)
Journal of Library & Information Services in Distance Learning     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 635)
Information Retrieval     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 616)
Information Sciences     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 602)
International Journal on Digital Libraries     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 580)
Information Processing & Management     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 567)
Information Systems Research     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 557)
College & Research Libraries     Open Access   (Followers: 528)
Evidence Based Library and Information Practice     Open Access   (Followers: 461)
Journal of Library and Information Science     Open Access   (Followers: 444)
International Information & Library Review     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 437)
The Information Society: An International Journal     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 406)
Library Trends     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 390)
Library and Information Research     Open Access   (Followers: 363)
Forensic Science International: Digital Investigation     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 344)
Annals of Library and Information Studies (ALIS)     Open Access   (Followers: 337)
International Journal of Library Science     Open Access   (Followers: 303)
Canadian Journal of Information and Library Science     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 289)
College & Research Libraries News     Partially Free   (Followers: 286)
Bioinformatics     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 283)
The Reference Librarian     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 267)
College & Undergraduate Libraries     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 261)
IFLA Journal     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 261)
Library Leadership & Management     Open Access   (Followers: 261)
Journal of Electronic Resources Librarianship     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 259)
Journal of Library Administration     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 254)
Library Collections, Acquisitions, and Technical Services     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 253)
Communications in Information Literacy     Open Access   (Followers: 244)
Data Technologies and Applications     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 236)
American Libraries     Partially Free   (Followers: 223)
Journal of the Medical Library Association     Open Access   (Followers: 222)
Code4Lib Journal     Open Access   (Followers: 218)
Journal of Information & Knowledge Management     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 215)
International Journal of Information Management     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 212)
Cataloging & Classification Quarterly     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 207)
Journal of Library Metadata     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 206)
Australian Library Journal     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 198)
Journal of Documentation     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 195)
portal: Libraries and the Academy     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 189)
Ariadne Magazine     Open Access   (Followers: 185)
Journal of Hospital Librarianship     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 184)
Behavioral & Social Sciences Librarian     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 179)
Aslib Proceedings     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 172)
Library & Information History     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 165)
American Archivist     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 161)
EDUCAUSE Review     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 161)
Research Library Issues     Free   (Followers: 159)
The Serials Librarian     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 156)
The Library : The Transactions of the Bibliographical Society     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 154)
New Review of Academic Librarianship     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 151)
Book History     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 149)
Against the Grain     Partially Free   (Followers: 143)
Library Technology Reports     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 141)
Journal of eScience Librarianship     Open Access   (Followers: 134)
DESIDOC Journal of Library & Information Technology     Open Access   (Followers: 105)
Archives and Museum Informatics     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 99)
Australian Academic & Research Libraries     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 99)
European Journal of Information Systems     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 95)
Online Information Review     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 91)
Journal of Librarianship and Scholarly Communication     Open Access   (Followers: 88)
International Journal of Digital Curation     Open Access   (Followers: 85)
Information Technologies & International Development     Open Access   (Followers: 84)
Journal of Electronic Publishing     Open Access   (Followers: 77)
Serials Review     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 75)
Journal of Education in Library and Information Science - JELIS     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 74)
International Journal of Digital Library Systems     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 74)
Journal of Interlibrary Loan Document Delivery & Electronic Reserve     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 69)
LIBER Quarterly : The Journal of the Association of European Research Libraries     Open Access   (Followers: 68)
Archival Science     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 66)
Ethics and Information Technology     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 66)
Journal of the Canadian Health Libraries Association / Journal de l'Association des bibliothèques de la santé du Canada     Open Access   (Followers: 66)
Library Philosophy and Practice     Open Access   (Followers: 66)
Insights : the UKSG journal     Open Access   (Followers: 65)
Practical Academic Librarianship : The International Journal of the SLA Academic Division     Open Access   (Followers: 65)
MIS Quarterly : Management Information Systems Quarterly     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 63)
Journal of Management Information Systems     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 60)
Science & Technology Libraries     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 59)
Journal of Information Technology     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 56)
The Bottom Line: Managing Library Finances     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 56)
Alexandria : The Journal of National and International Library and Information Issues     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 56)
Journal of Health & Medical Informatics     Open Access   (Followers: 54)
Partnership : the Canadian Journal of Library and Information Practice and Research     Open Access   (Followers: 54)
Archives and Manuscripts     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 52)
International Journal of Legal Information     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 51)
Library & Archival Security     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 49)
Bangladesh Journal of Library and Information Science     Open Access   (Followers: 47)
OCLC Systems & Services     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 46)
Community & Junior College Libraries     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 45)
Information Discovery and Delivery     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 44)
Journal of Access Services     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 40)
Medical Reference Services Quarterly     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 40)
VINE Journal of Information and Knowledge Management Systems     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 40)
Journal of the Society of Archivists     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 36)
Scholarly and Research Communication     Open Access   (Followers: 36)
Public Library Quarterly     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 32)
Journal of Archival Organization     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 31)
Information & Culture : A Journal of History     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 31)
Australasian Public Libraries and Information Services     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 31)
Journal of the Association for Information Systems     Open Access   (Followers: 31)
Research Evaluation     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 30)
Foundations and Trends® in Information Retrieval     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 30)
Information     Open Access   (Followers: 29)
International Journal of Information Retrieval Research     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 29)
Information Systems Frontiers     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 27)
International Journal of Intellectual Property Management     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 26)
International Journal of Information Privacy, Security and Integrity     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 26)
Proceedings of the American Society for Information Science and Technology     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 26)
Health Information Management Journal     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 26)
Journal of the Institute of Conservation     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 25)
Access     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 24)
Nordic Journal of Information Literacy in Higher Education     Open Access   (Followers: 24)
South African Journal of Libraries and Information Science     Open Access   (Followers: 23)
Sci-Tech News     Open Access   (Followers: 23)
LASIE : Library Automated Systems Information Exchange     Free   (Followers: 22)
Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 22)
NASIG Newsletter     Open Access   (Followers: 21)
InCite     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 20)
Georgia Library Quarterly     Open Access   (Followers: 20)
LOEX Quarterly     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 20)
RBM : A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Cultural Heritage     Open Access   (Followers: 20)
Urban Library Journal     Open Access   (Followers: 19)
El Profesional de la Informacion     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 18)
Journal of Research on Libraries and Young Adults     Open Access   (Followers: 18)
International Journal of Web Portals     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 17)
Communication Booknotes Quarterly     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 16)
Theological Librarianship : An Online Journal of the American Theological Library Association     Open Access   (Followers: 16)
Perspectives in International Librarianship     Open Access   (Followers: 16)
Biblioteca Universitaria     Open Access   (Followers: 16)
Collection and Curation     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 15)
Manuscripta     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 15)
Bibliotheca Orientalis     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 14)
International Journal of Business Information Systems     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 14)
International Journal of Information Technology, Communications and Convergence     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 14)
Notes     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 14)
Online Journal of Public Health Informatics     Open Access   (Followers: 14)
Alexandría : Revista de Ciencias de la Información     Open Access   (Followers: 14)
Anales de Documentacion     Open Access   (Followers: 14)
Journal of Educational Media, Memory, and Society     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 13)
Biblios     Open Access   (Followers: 13)
International Journal of Intercultural Information Management     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 12)
Alsic : Apprentissage des Langues et Systèmes d'Information et de Communication     Open Access   (Followers: 12)
Journal of Information Technology Teaching Cases     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 12)
Journal of Religious & Theological Information     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 11)
Universal Access in the Information Society     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 11)
InterActions: UCLA Journal of Education and Information     Open Access   (Followers: 11)
International Journal of Information and Decision Sciences     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 11)
Journal of Information Systems     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 11)
Kansas Library Association College & University Libraries Section Proceedings     Open Access   (Followers: 11)
Journal of Information Engineering and Applications     Open Access   (Followers: 10)
Journal of Global Information Management     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 9)
Southeastern Librarian     Open Access   (Followers: 9)
e & i Elektrotechnik und Informationstechnik     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 8)
JLIS.it     Open Access   (Followers: 8)
International Journal of Multicriteria Decision Making     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 8)
JISTEM : Journal of Information Systems and Technology Management     Open Access   (Followers: 8)
International Journal of Multimedia Information Retrieval     Partially Free   (Followers: 8)
BIBLOS - Revista do Departamento de Biblioteconomia e História     Open Access   (Followers: 7)
New Review of Information Networking     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 7)
Idaho Librarian     Free   (Followers: 7)
Slavic & East European Information Resources     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 6)
Egyptian Informatics Journal     Open Access   (Followers: 6)
Informaatiotutkimus     Open Access   (Followers: 5)
Revista Interamericana de Bibliotecología     Open Access   (Followers: 5)
CIC. Cuadernos de Informacion y Comunicacion     Open Access   (Followers: 5)
Bridgewater Review     Open Access   (Followers: 5)
Bilgi Dünyası     Open Access   (Followers: 5)
Open Systems & Information Dynamics     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 4)
ProInflow : Journal for Information Sciences     Open Access   (Followers: 4)
Nordic Journal of Library and Information Studies     Open Access   (Followers: 4)
International Journal of Cooperative Information Systems     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 4)
OJS på dansk     Open Access   (Followers: 4)
Investigación Bibliotecológica     Open Access   (Followers: 4)
Revista Española de Documentación Científica     Open Access   (Followers: 4)
International Journal of Organisational Design and Engineering     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 3)
Journal of Information Systems Teaching Notes     Hybrid Journal   (Followers: 3)
HLA News     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 3)
Encontros Bibli : revista eletrônica de biblioteconomia e ciência da informação     Open Access   (Followers: 3)
SLIS Student Research Journal     Open Access   (Followers: 3)
VRA Bulletin     Open Access   (Followers: 3)
Türk Kütüphaneciliği : Turkish Librarianship     Open Access   (Followers: 2)
Información, Cultura y Sociedad     Open Access   (Followers: 2)
Revista General de Información y Documentación     Open Access   (Followers: 2)
Informação & Informação     Open Access   (Followers: 2)
In Monte Artium     Full-text available via subscription   (Followers: 1)
Knjižnica : Revija za Področje Bibliotekarstva in Informacijske Znanosti     Open Access   (Followers: 1)
Documentación de las Ciencias de la Información     Open Access   (Followers: 1)
Palabra Clave (La Plata)     Open Access  
Liinc em Revista     Open Access  

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Similar Journals
Journal Cover
MIS Quarterly : Management Information Systems Quarterly
Journal Prestige (SJR): 5.085
Citation Impact (citeScore): 8
Number of Followers: 63  
 
  Hybrid Journal Hybrid journal (It can contain Open Access articles)
ISSN (Print) 0276-7783 - ISSN (Online) 2162-9730
Published by MISRC Homepage  [1 journal]
  • The Value of Centralized IT in Building Resilience During Crises: Evidence
           from U.S. Higher Education’s Transition to Emergency Remote Teaching

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      Authors: Jiyong Park et al.
      Abstract: The COVID-19 pandemic forced organizations, including higher education institutions, to rapidly adjust their operations. In the face of the pandemic, most higher education institutions shut down their campuses and transitioned to emergency remote teaching mode. This study examines digital resilience in higher education institutions through the conceptual lens of disaster response management, by assessing the role played by the centralized governance of information technology (IT) investments. We posit that centralized IT helps organizations maintain customer satisfaction with services during a crisis (e.g., student satisfaction with classes during COVID-19) by facilitating the organization-wide transition to an emergency operational mode and supporting its service operations. Consolidating data on IT investment, governance, and course evaluations from 463 U.S. higher education institutions from 2017-2020, we show that centralized IT helped organizations adapt better to the pandemic in terms of maintaining student satisfaction. Moreover, we found that centralized IT investments geared toward facilitating organizational coordination and providing instructional and technical support played a pivotal role in enabling ERT and improving student ratings during the crisis. These results are corroborated by interviews with CIOs of U.S. higher education institutions. Additional analyses also suggest that the effectiveness of centralized IT governance is contingent upon organizational size, dissimilarity of local units, and the strategic role of the CIO. We also discuss theoretical extensions toward digital resilience as well as practical implications.
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:41 PST
       
  • Data is the New Protein: How the Commonwealth of Virginia Built Digital
           Resilience Muscle and Rebounded from Opioid and COVID Shocks

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      Authors: Monica Chiarini Tremblay et al.
      Abstract: During shocks, residents and businesses rely upon the government to ensure health, safety, and the continuity of services. The government’s ability to respond depends upon how well it utilizes its data resources and builds digital resilience. Yet governments often fail to integrate data from different agencies to respond effectively to shocks. We conceptualize digital resilience as a dynamic capability (DC). Although the DC framework provides a theoretical basis, it is unclear what actions managers can take to build DC. Through process tracing, we examine how the Commonwealth of Virginia (COVA) built DCs and rebounded from two shocks—the opioid crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic. COVA managers leveraged statewide data assets, built routines to disseminate data, and reconfigured operational capabilities to build three DCs—relationship building, intelligence creation, and value extraction. Data functioned as the “protein” to build the digital resilience “muscle.” We found that the relationship building DC leveraged the operational capabilities of data management, integration, and governance structure to foster data sharing, the intelligence creation DC leveraged analytics, and the value extraction DC converted analytics into cost savings, revenue generation, and new services. Whereas COVA built robust digital resilience by facilitating data sharing, the agencies exploited data assets to develop scalable solutions.
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:40 PST
       
  • Resilience in the Open Source Software Community: How Pandemic and
           Unemployment Shocks Influence Contributions to Others’ and One’s Own
           Projects

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      Authors: Onkar S. Malgonde et al.
      Abstract: Contributions by individual open source software (OSS) community members are the lifeblood of the OSS projects that power today’s digital economy and are important for the very survival of such communities. Individual contributions by OSS community members to others’ projects and their own determine whether OSS communities are resilient in the face of major shocks. Arguably, if crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic prompt users to reduce their contributions to others’ projects relative to the contributions to their own projects, such behavior can have implications for the overall resilience of the OSS community. Therefore, whether and how individuals change their contributions in the face of a crisis is an important question. We examine whether members in an OSS community increased or decreased their contributions to others’ projects relative to their own in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic, a sudden and unexpected global health-related shock that has affected almost everyone. We also compare and contrast this behavior when the OSS community faced increasing unemployment, an economic cyclic shock that is arguably and relatively more personal. Drawing on the concept of prosocial behavior and conservation of resources (COR) theory, we hypothesize that the pandemic increased OSS community members’ contributions to others’ projects relative to their own; on the other hand, the threat of rising unemployment decreased OSS community members’ contributions to others’ projects relative to their own. Our empirical analyses of a longitudinal dataset of over 18,000 OSS community members on GitHub, with more than 1.4 million member-day observations, support our hypotheses. This study contributes by uncovering the differential effects of exogenous health-related and economic shocks on the resilience of the OSS community. We conclude with a discussion of our findings’ implications for OSS community resilience.
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:39 PST
       
  • Understanding the Digital Resilience of Physicians during the COVID-19
           Pandemic: An Empirical Study

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      Authors: Yinghao Liu et al.
      Abstract: The COVID-19 pandemic has underscored the urgent need for healthcare entities to develop resilient strategies to cope with disruptions caused by the pandemic. This study focuses on the digital resilience of certified physicians who adopted an online healthcare community (OHC) to acquire patients and conduct telemedicine services during the pandemic. We synthesize the resilience literature and identify two effects of digital resilience—the resistance effect and the recovery effect. We use a proprietary dataset that matches online and offline data sources to study the digital resilience of physicians. A difference-in-differences (DID) analysis shows that physicians who adopted an OHC had strong resistance and recovery effects during the pandemic. Remarkably, after the COVID-19 outbreak, these physicians had 35.0% less reduction in medical consultations in the immediate period and 31.0% more bounce-back in the subsequent period as compared to physicians who did not adopt the OHC. We further analyze the sources of physicians’ digital resilience by distinguishing between new and existing patients from both online and offline channels. Our subgroup analysis shows that, in general, digital resilience is more pronounced when physicians have a higher online reputation rating or have more positive interactions with patients on the OHC platform, providing further support for the mechanisms underlying digital resilience. Our research has significant theoretical and managerial implications beyond the context of the pandemic.
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:39 PST
       
  • Special Issue Introduction: Building Digital Resilience against Major
           Shocks

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      Authors: Waifong Boh et al.
      Abstract: Major shocks such as the COVID-19 pandemic create unique and exceptional challenges for different entities, including individuals, groups, and organizations. In this special issue editorial, we introduce the concept of digital resilience, which refers to the capabilities developed through the use of digital technologies to absorb major shocks, adapt to disruptions caused by the shocks, and transform to a new stable state, where entities are more prepared to deal with major shocks. The individual papers in this special issue offer compelling examples of how digital resilience is exhibited and how the process of digital resilience can unfold in response to specific major shocks. Drawing upon and extending these papers, we present an integrated framework of how digital technology can help build resilience capabilities, which is missing in past research but needed to mitigate and manage future major shocks, including financial recessions and climate change. We conclude with four important themes for future IS research.
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:38 PST
       
  • Cyberslacking in the Workplace: Antecedents and Effects on Job Performance
           

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      Authors: Viswanath Venkatesh et al.
      Abstract: Employees’ nonwork use of information technology (IT), or cyberslacking, is of growing concern due to its erosion of job performance and other negative organizational consequences. Research on cyberslacking antecedents has drawn on diverse theoretical perspectives, resulting in the lack of a cohesive explanation of cyberslacking. Further, prior studies have generally overlooked IT-specific variables. To address cyberslacking problems in organizations, as well as research gaps in the literature, we used a combination of a literature-based approach and a qualitative inquiry to develop a model of cyberslacking that includes a 2×2 typology of antecedents. The proposed model was tested and supported in a three-wave field study of 395 employees in a U.S. Fortune-100 organization. This study organizes antecedents from diverse research streams and validates their relative impact on cyberslacking, thus providing a cohesive theoretical explanation of cyberslacking. This study also incorporates contextualization (i.e., IT-specific factors) into theory development and enriches the IS literature by examining the nonwork aspects of IT use and their negative consequences to organizations. In addition, the results provide practitioners with insights into the nonwork use of IT in organizations, particularly regarding how they can take organizational action to mitigate cyberslacking and maintain employee productivity.
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:37 PST
       
  • Where is IT in Information Security' The Interrelationship among IT
           Investment, Security Awareness, and Data Breaches

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      Authors: Wilson Weixun Li et al.
      Abstract: Data breaches can severely damage a firm’s reputation and its customers’ confidence. Firms must therefore continuously invest in security measures to prevent such breaches. However, the effectiveness of security investment has been questioned by both practitioners and academics. We illustrate the bidirectional dynamic relationship between information technology (IT) investment and data breaches moderated by threat and countermeasure security awareness using an eight-year panel of 311 U.S.-listed firms to provide empirical evidence that threat awareness broadens firms’ scope for addressing data-breach issues by investing more in IT than in security. Countermeasure awareness equips firms with sufficient knowledge and experience to ensure effective implementation of IT, which provides more comprehensive protection than security investment alone. Our results suggest that firms should evolve beyond the reactive mindset of solely upgrading security and begin nurturing both threat awareness and countermeasure awareness to address the underlying IT system issues that are the cause of data breaches.
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:37 PST
       
  • It Depends On When You Search

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      Authors: Jun Li et al.
      Abstract: Existing studies have found that online search is a revealed measure for investor attention and a useful predictor of stock returns. We study the heterogeneity in retail investor attention by comparing search conducted on weekdays vs. weekends and investigate the price pressure channel and information processing channel for stock return predictability. According to the information processing channel, weekends afford retail investors more time for the intensive cognitive analysis necessary to make better predictions. Alternatively, weekend search might better capture the price pressure from retail investors’ trading activities. We provide empirical results that support the information processing channel. We first show that weekend search, rather than weekday search, predicts large-cap stock returns in both the cross-section and time series. Additionally, our findings on retail trading activity contradict the price pressure channel in that weekday search, rather than weekend search, leads to a subsequent retail order imbalance. Overall, our study contributes to the literature on the predictive power of online search on stock returns, which has mainly focused on the price pressure channel, which yields significant results for small-cap stocks only.
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:36 PST
       
  • Know Your Firm: Managing Social Media Engagement to Improve Firm Sales
           Performance

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      Authors: Fei Ren et al.
      Abstract: We examine the impact of firm social media engagement on sales performance, answering “whether,” “what,” and “how” questions. The study uses a quasi-experimental design in a social e-commerce setting, for which propensity score matching and difference-in-differences methods quantify a mean 20.67% sales increase after firm social media adoption. We also find that firms that sell low-involvement products benefit more from social media adoption, compared to those that sell high-involvement products. Further, in terms of how to manage social media engagement, we find that informative content, in general, is effective for sales of high-involvement products, whereas promotional content, a new type of content discovered in this study, is more beneficial for sales of low-involvement products. Meanwhile, more social media followers generate better firm sales performance. We used instrumental variables and the control function method to address endogeneity issues and conducted robustness checks to support our conclusions. This study sheds light on the value of firm social media, particularly regarding industry differences and firm know-how.
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:35 PST
       
  • Responding to Online Reviews in Competitive Markets: A Controlled
           Diffusion Approach

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      Authors: Mingwen Yang et al.
      Abstract: We study how firms respond to online customer reviews in a competitive market where they jostle with one another for sales based on online ratings. The focus of this paper is on how firms can optimally manage their ratings through management response and how review ratings affect the sales and profits of competing firms. We develop a controlled diffusion process to model the coevolution of sales and ratings as a function of the response strategy chosen to maximize profit over time. Our model considers a variety of factors, such as profit margin and customer rating sensitivity, that influence a firm’s effort to manage ratings and subsequently its sales and profits. More response effort needs to be exerted to manage ratings when either the profit margin of a tour is very high or customers are very sensitive to ratings. We estimate our model using data on Ctrip’s tours that include each tour’s sales, reviews, prices, and tour features. We find that consumers anchor their beliefs in the mean market rating and that their purchase decisions depend on the tour’s rating relative to this anchor. Thus, relative, rather than absolute, ratings matter. Our study informs firms on how competition and other primitives impact their efforts to manage ratings and hence profit. Our methodology allowed us to conduct “what-if” analyses, for example, to study what would happen to the review ratings, sales, and profits of a tour if a firm adopted a different response strategy. We were also able to provide turnaround strategies for struggling tours, i.e., factors that a loss-making tour should change if it wishes to make a positive profit. Ultimately, we conducted a competitive analysis that allowed us to modify certain parameters that affect the intensity of competition and hence the sales and the profits of competing tours. Finally, we demonstrate the flexibility of the model by extending it to incorporate multiple state variables that might affect the response strategy.
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:34 PST
       
  • Unintended Emotional Effects of Online Health Communities: A Text
           Mining-Supported Empirical Study

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      Authors: Jiaqi Zhou et al.
      Abstract: Online health communities (OHCs) play an important role in enabling patients to exchange information and obtain social support from each other. However, do OHC interactions always benefit patients' In this research, we investigate different mechanisms by which OHC content may affect patients’ emotions. Specifically, we notice users can read not only emotional support intended to help them but also emotional support targeting other persons or posts that are not intended to generate any emotional support (auxiliary content). Drawing from emotional contagion theories, we argue that even though emotional support may benefit targeted support seekers, it could have a negative impact on the emotions of other support seekers. Our empirical study on an OHC for depression patients supports these arguments. Our findings are new to the literature and have critical practical implications since they suggest that we should carefully manage OHC-based interventions for depression patients to avoid unintended consequences. We design a novel deep learning model to differentiate emotional support from auxiliary content. Such differentiation is critical for identifying the negative effect of emotional support on unintended recipients. We also discuss options to alter the intervention volume, length, and frequency to tackle the challenge of the negative effect.
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:34 PST
       
  • Unifying Algorithmic and Theoretical Perspectives: Emotions in Online
           Reviews and Sales

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      Authors: Yifan Yu et al.
      Abstract: Emotion artificial intelligence, the algorithm that recognizes and interprets various human emotions beyond valence (positive and negative polarity), is still in its infancy but has attracted attention from industry and academia. Based on discrete emotion theory and statistical language modeling, this work proposes an algorithm to enable automatic domain-adaptive emotion lexicon construction and multidimensional emotion detection in texts. Using a large-scale dataset of China’s movie market from 2012 to 2018, we constructed and validated a domain-specific emotion lexicon and demonstrated the predictive power of eight discrete emotions (i.e., surprise, joy, anticipation, love, anxiety, sadness, anger, and disgust) in online reviews on box office sales. We found that representing overall emotions through discrete emotions yields higher prediction accuracy than valence or latent emotion variables generated by topic modeling. To understand the source of the predictive power from a theoretical perspective and to test the cross-culture generalizability of our prediction study, we further conducted an experiment in the U.S. movie market based on theories on emotion, judgment, and decision-making. We found that discrete emotions, mediated by perceived processing fluency, significantly affect the perceived review helpfulness, which further influences purchase intention. Our work shows the economic value of emotions in online reviews, generates insight into the mechanism of their effects, and has managerial implications for online review platform design, movie marketing, and cinema operations.
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:33 PST
       
  • Unlocking the Power of Voice for Financial Risk Prediction: A
           Theory-Driven Deep Learning Design Approach

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      Authors: Yi Yang et al.
      Abstract: Unstructured multimedia data (text and audio) provides unprecedented opportunities to derive actionable decision-making in the financial industry, in areas such as portfolio and risk management. However, due to formidable methodological challenges, the promise of business value from unstructured multimedia data has not materialized. In this study, we use a design science approach to develop DeepVoice, a novel nonverbal predictive analysis system for financial risk prediction, in the setting of quarterly earnings conference calls. DeepVoice forecasts financial risk by leveraging not only what managers say (verbal linguistic cues) but also how managers say it (vocal cues) during the earnings conference calls. The design of DeepVoice addresses several challenges associated with the analysis of nonverbal communication. We also propose a two-stage deep learning model to effectively integrate managers’ sequential vocal and verbal cues. Using a unique dataset of 6,047 earnings call samples (audio recordings and textual transcripts) of S&P 500 firms across four years, we show that DeepVoice yields remarkably lower risk forecast errors than that achieved by previous efforts. The improvement can also translate into nontrivial economic gains in options trading. The theoretical and practical implications of analyzing vocal cues are discussed.
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:32 PST
       
  • Experts vs. Nonexperts in Online Crowdfunding Markets

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      Authors: Mingfeng Lin et al.
      Abstract: The growth of crowdfunding markets that include both expert and nonexpert investors will soon accelerate due to recent changes in Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) regulations. Prior work has suggested that nonexperts (1) may benefit from experts’ participation via mimicking their trades, but (2) will also face a cost, as experts crowding nonexperts out of the best opportunities will ensure that nonexperts will suffer lower returns than experts. Traditional economic theory holds that the crowding effect means that the relative importance of nonexperts in the market will decline over time until they become unimportant. Exploiting a unique period in one crowdfunding market (Prosper.com) that allowed us to directly estimate the net cost of competing with better-informed experts, we found that the net negative effects of expert participation on nonexperts are small. We used simulations to both better understand (1) the market characteristics and crowdfunding platform choices that influence experts’ and nonexperts’ returns, their return gap, and the extent to which nonexperts are better or worse off relative to a market without expert participation, and (2) the factors that may contribute to the small expert/nonexpert Prosper return gap.
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:32 PST
       
  • Putting Religious Bias in Context: How Offline and Online Contexts Shape
           Religious Bias in Online Prosocial Lending

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      Authors: Amin Sabzehzar et al.
      Abstract: Biases on online platforms pose a threat to social inclusion. We examine the influence of a novel source of bias in online philanthropic lending, namely that associated with religious differences. We first propose religion distance as a probabilistic measure of differences between pairs of individuals residing in different countries. We then incorporate this measure into a gravity model of trade to explain variation in country-to-country lending volumes. We further propose a set of contextual moderators that characterize individuals’ offline (local) and online social contexts, which we argue combine to determine the influence of religion distance on lending activity. We empirically estimate our gravity model using data from Kiva.org, reflecting all lending actions that took place between 2006 and 2017. We demonstrate the negative and significant effect of religion distance on lending activity, over and above other established factors in the literature. Further, we demonstrate the moderating role of lenders’ offline social context (diversity, social hostilities, and governmental favoritism of religion) on the aforementioned relationship to online lending behavior. Finally, we offer empirical evidence of the parallel role of online contextual factors, namely those related to community features offered by the Kiva platform (lending teams), which appear to amplify the role of religious bias. In particular, we show that religious team membership is a double-edged sword that has both favorable and unfavorable consequences, increasing lending in general but skewing said lending toward religiously similar borrowers. Our findings speak to the important frictions associated with religious differences in individual philanthropy; they point to the role of governmental policy vis-à-vis religious tolerance as a determinant of citizens’ global philanthropic behavior, and they highlight design implications for online platforms with an eye toward managing religious bias.
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:31 PST
       
  • Editor's Comments: Producing Significant Research

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      Authors: Andrew Burton-Jones et al.
      Abstract: The purpose of this editorial is to provide background on the introduction of “significance statements” in MIS Quarterly’s (MISQ’s) review and publication process in 2023 and to situate them as part of ongoing efforts to encourage and enable authors to conduct the most significant research possible and to write up their research so that its significance is as compelling as possible.
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:30 PST
       
  • Getting Trapped in Technical Debt: Sociotechnical Analysis of a Legacy
           System’s Replacement

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      Authors: Tapani Rinta-Kahila et al.
      Abstract: Organizations replace their legacy systems for technical, economic, and operational reasons. Replacement is a risky proposition, as high levels of technical and social inertia make these systems hard to withdraw. Failure to fully replace systems results in complex system architectures involving manifold hidden dependencies that carry technical debt. To understand how a process for replacing a complex legacy system unfolds and accumulates technical debt, we conducted an explanatory case study at a local manufacturing site that had struggled to replace its mission-critical legacy systems as part of the larger global company’s commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) system implementation. We approach the replacement as a sociotechnical change and leverage the punctuated sociotechnical information system change model in combination with the design-moves framework to analyze how the site balanced creating digital options, countering social inertia, and managing (architectural) technical debt. The findings generalize to a two-level (local/global) system-dynamics model delineating how replacing a deeply entrenched mission-critical system generates positive and negative feedback loops within and between social and technical changes at local and global levels. The loops, unless addressed, accrue technical debt that hinders legacy system discontinuance and gradually locks the organization into a debt-constrained state. The model helps managers anticipate challenges that accompany replacing highly entrenched systems and formulate effective strategies to address them.
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:30 PST
       
  • Issue Cover

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      Authors: MISQ Office
      PubDate: Fri, 03 Mar 2023 13:13:29 PST
       
  • Is Organizational Commitment to IT Good for Employees' The Role of
           Industry Dynamism and Concentration

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      Authors: Andreas Engelen et al.
      Abstract: While research on the consequences of organizational commitment to IT has focused on outcomes of interest to shareholders, such as profitability and firm value, recent research has also considered other stakeholders that might benefit from an increased organizational commitment to IT, especially customers. We extend this line of the literature by investigating the benefits of a firm’s organizational commitment to IT for firms’ employees, a stakeholder group that uses and depends heavily on IT in its daily work. This exploratory study links a firm’s organizational commitment to IT with the nonmonetary employee metrics of job satisfaction and work-life balance and embeds these associations in the industry’s dynamism and concentration. We test our research model with a multi-industry dataset of 523 firms from the S&P 500 (2008-2017 period). Our findings indicate that an organizational commitment to IT may facilitate job satisfaction and work-life balance but only when industry dynamism and industry concentration are low. Additional analyses show that IT commitment’s influence on these outcomes depends on the firm’s commitment to particular IT technologies; for instance, organizational commitments to cloud technology and remote technology are particularly positively associated with work-life balance.
      PubDate: Thu, 01 Dec 2022 15:00:07 PST
       
  • How Green Information Technology Standards and Strategies Influence
           Performance: Role of Environment, Cost, and Dual Focus

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      Authors: Terence J. V. Saldanha et al.
      Abstract: How do green information technology (IT) standards and organizational strategies jointly influence firms’ environmental sustainability and financial performance' This is an important question, as many firms adopt green IT standards without considering the fit with their organizational strategies and therefore face uncertain or mixed outcomes. We address this question by developing a theory-driven conceptual framework and collecting archival data on green IT standards and green IT organizational strategies from more than 230 firms in India. Our analysis yields two main findings. First, an environment-focused green IT organizational strategy has a stronger positive moderating effect than a cost-focused green IT organizational strategy on the association between green IT standards and sustainability-monitoring capability. Similarly, an environment-focused green IT organizational strategy has a stronger positive moderating effect than a cost-focused green IT organizational strategy on the association between green IT standards and financial profit. Second, a dual-focused green IT organizational strategy positively moderates the association between green IT standards and profit. This study provides a theoretical explanation and empirical evidence to support the salience of green IT standards and complementary organizational strategies in advancing environmental sustainability and financial performance objectives. It also informs managerial decision-making about how firms can choose the appropriate green IT organizational strategy to enhance sustainability-monitoring capability and the financial benefits of green IT standards.
      PubDate: Thu, 01 Dec 2022 15:00:06 PST
       
 
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