IS

Oborn, Eivor

Topic Weight Topic Terms
0.358 e-government collective sociomaterial material institutions actors practice particular organizational routines practices relations mindfulness different analysis
0.274 case study studies paper use research analysis interpretive identify qualitative approach understanding critical development managerial
0.265 health healthcare medical care patient patients hospital hospitals hit health-care telemedicine systems records clinical practices
0.203 research researchers framework future information systems important present agenda identify areas provide understanding contributions using
0.172 use support information effective behaviors work usage examine extent users expertise uses longitudinal focus routine
0.136 value business benefits technology based economic creation related intangible cocreation assessing financial improved key economics
0.128 coordination mechanisms work contingencies boundaries temporal coordinating vertical associated activities different coordinate suggests dispersed coordinated
0.116 digital divide use access artifacts internet inequality libraries shift library increasingly everyday societies understand world
0.106 boundary practices capacity new boundaries use practice absorptive organizational technology work field multiple study objects
0.102 systems information research theory implications practice discussed findings field paper practitioners role general important key
0.100 research study influence effects literature theoretical use understanding theory using impact behavior insights examine influences

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Barrett, Michael 3 Davidson, Elizabeth 1 Orlikowski, Wanda J. 1 Venters, Will 1
case study 2 coordination 1 computer-mediated communication and collaboration 1 diversity 1
development 1 digital infrastructure 1 digital 1 electronic patient record 1
Grid computing 1 health IT 1 information systems and organizational change 1 IT adoption 1
longitudinal research 1 multidisciplinary 1 mangle of practice 1 online communities 1
practice theory 1 performativity 1 sustainable change 1 sociomaterial 1
temporality 1 transparency 1 unity 1 value 1

Articles (3)

Creating Value in Online Communities: The Sociomaterial Configuring of Strategy, Platform, and Stakeholder Engagement (Information Systems Research, 2016)
Authors: Abstract:
    How is value created in an online community (OC) over time? We explored this question through a longitudinal field study of an OC in the healthcare arena. We found that multiple kinds of value were produced and changed over time as different participants engaged with the OC and its evolving technology in various ways. To explain our findings, we theorize OC value as performed through the ongoing sociomaterial configuring of strategies, digital platforms, and stakeholder engagement. We develop a process perspective to explain these dynamics and identify multiple different kinds of value being created by an OC over time: financial, epistemic, ethical, service, reputational, and platform. Our research points to the importance of expanding the notion of OC users to encompass a broader understanding of stakeholders. It further suggests that creating OC value increasingly requires going beyond a dyadic relationship between the OC and the firm to encompassing a more complex relationship involving a wider ecosystem of stakeholders.
A Trichordal Temporal Approach to Digital Coordination: The Sociomaterial Mangling of the CERN Grid (MIS Quarterly, 2014)
Authors: Abstract:
    This paper develops a sociomaterial perspective on digital coordination. It extends Pickering’s mangle of practice by using a trichordal approach to temporal emergence. We provide new understanding as to how the nonhuman and human agencies involved in coordination are embedded in the past, present, and future. We draw on an in-depth field study conducted between 2006 and 2010 of the development, introduction, and use of a computing grid infrastructure by the CERN particle physics community. Three coordination tensions are identified at different temporal dimensions, namelyobtaining adequate transparency in the present, modeling a future infrastructure, and the historical disciplining of social and material inertias. We propose and develop the concept of digital coordination, and contribute a trichordal temporal approach to understanding the development and use of digital infrastructure as being orientated to the past and future while emerging in the present.
Unity in Diversity: Electronic Patient Record Use in Multidisciplinary Practice. (Information Systems Research, 2011)
Authors: Abstract:
    In this paper we examine the use of electronic patient records (EPR) by clinical specialists in their development of multidisciplinary care for diagnosis and treatment of breast cancer. We develop a practice theory lens to investigate EPR use across multidisciplinary team practice. Our findings suggest that there are oppositional tendencies towards diversity in EPR use and unity which emerges across multidisciplinary work, and this influences the outcomes of EPR use. The value of this perspective is illustrated through the analysis of a yearlong, longitudinal case study of a multidisciplinary team of surgeons, oncologists, pathologists, radiologists, and nurse specialists adopting a new EPR. Each group adapted their use of the EPR to their diverse specialist practices, but they nonetheless orientated their use of the EPR to each others' practices sufficiently to support unity in multidisciplinary teamwork. Multidisciplinary practice elements were also reconfigured in an episode of explicit negotiations, resulting in significant changes in EPR use within team meetings. Our study contributes to the growing literature that questions the feasibility and necessity of achieving high levels of standardized, uniform health information technology use in healthcare.