IS

Joshi, K. D.

Topic Weight Topic Terms
0.268 capabilities capability firm firms performance resources business information technology firm's resource-based competitive it-enabled view study
0.217 performance results study impact research influence effects data higher efficiency effect significantly findings impacts empirical
0.182 new licensing license open comparison type affiliation perpetual prior address peer question greater compared explore
0.137 productivity information technology data production investment output investments impact returns using labor value research results
0.130 knowledge application management domain processes kms systems study different use domains role comprehension effective types
0.117 innovation innovations innovative organizing technological vision disruptive crowdsourcing path implemented explain base opportunities study diversity
0.115 perceived transparency control design enjoyment experience study diagnosticity improve features develop consequences showing user experiential
0.108 data used develop multiple approaches collection based research classes aspect single literature profiles means crowd

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Chi, Lei 1 Datta, Avimanyu 1 Deng, Xuefei (Nancy) 1 Galliers, Robert D. 1
Han, Shu 1
absorptive capacity 1 AmazonÕs Mechanical Turk 1 business value of IT 1 competitive impacts of IS 1
Crowdsourcing 1 crowd worker value 1 empowerment 1 firm innovation 1
gig economy 1 IT-enabled knowledge capability 1 ICT ethics 1 knowledge management 1
marginalization 1 microsourcing 1 open source 1 on-demand workforce 1
strategic management of IT 1 societal impacts 1 value sensitive design 1

Articles (2)

The Duality of Empowerment and Marginalization in Microtask Crowdsourcing: Giving Voice to the Less Powerful Through Value Sensitive Design (MIS Quarterly, 2016)
Authors: Abstract:
    Crowdsourcing (CS) of micro tasks is a relatively new, open source work form enabled by information and communication technologies. While anecdotal evidence of its benefits abounds, our understanding of the phenomenon's societal consequences remains limited. Drawing on value sensitive design (VSD), we explore microtask CS as perceived by crowd workers, revealing their values as a means of informing the design of CS platforms. Analyzing detailed narratives of 210 crowd workers participating in Amazon's Mechanical Turk (MTurk), we uncover a set of nine values they share: access, autonomy, fairness, transparency, communication, security, accountability, making an impact, and dignity. We find that these values are implicated in four crowdsourcing structures: compensation, governance, technology, and microtask. Two contrasting perceptionsÑempowerment and marginalizationÑcoexist, forming a duality of microtask CS. The study contributes to the CS and VSD literatures, heightens awareness of worker marginalization in microtask CS, and offers guidelines for improving CS practice. Specifically, we offer recommendations regarding the ethical use of crowd workers (including for academic research), and call for improving MTurk platform design for greater worker empowerment.
Changing the Competitive Landscape: Continuous Innovation Through IT-Enabled Knowledge Capabilities. (Information Systems Research, 2010)
Authors: Abstract:
    We theoretically and empirically investigate the relationship between information technology (IT) and firm innovation. Invoking absorptive capacity (ACAP) theory, we introduce and develop the concepts of three types of IT-enabled knowledge capabilities. Firm innovation is examined through two observable innovation outcomes: patents, and new product and service introductions. These innovation outcomes are often labeled as competitive actions aggressively undertaken by firms to gain market share or to achieve profitability. We use secondary data about IT-enabled knowledge capabilities and innovation outcomes of 110 firms. Our data results provide strong support for our main assertion that knowledge capabilities that are enhanced through the use of IT contribute to firm innovation. The study's findings suggest that the three types of IT-enabled knowledge capabilities have differential effects on firm innovation. This study substantially contributes to the information systems (IS) research, methodology, and practice in multiple ways.