- Details
Track Chair:
Yang Lee, Northeastern University, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Track Description:
This track will focus on ways to better understand and address information quality problems in organizational information systems. The track will emphasize approaches to system design that ensure high quality information, behavioral issues in the use of information systems with information quality problems, and managerial issues in the design and use of systems with information quality problems. Studies applying theoretical perspectives from psychology, artificial intelligence, management science, and organization science are sought. Organizational case studies involving solutions to information quality problems are also sought.
Mini-Tracks:
Data and Information Quality in Decision Making
Irit Askira Gleman, DQIQ Research Solutions, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
This mini-track centers on the relationship between the quality of the information that is employed in the decision-making process on one hand, and, on the other hand, the product of the decision, other aspects of the decision process, the consequences of the decision, and/or its utility and value. The ultimate goal of this research is to produce solutions that bring under control and mitigate the negative effects of poor information quality, i.e., improve decisions both subjectively and objectively.
Information Quality and Social Media in e-Government
Yurong Yao, Suffolk University, This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
The successful adoption of information systems, development of effective application, and improvement of information quality become increasing important in electronic government. Due to the special features of government, these issues in the government differ from those in the company setting, which directly impact citizens’ satisfaction and democracy. This minitrack seeks papers that address the role of information quality in citizen-government communications, particularly in the usage of social media, such as microblog. We encourage innovative, inter-disciplinary, complete or work-in-progress papers. We welcome all research methods, including qualitative, quantitative, experimental, and action research.