IS

Racherla, Pradeep

Topic Weight Topic Terms
0.295 digital divide use access artifacts internet inequality libraries shift library increasingly everyday societies understand world
0.264 negative positive effect findings results effects blog suggest role blogs posts examined period relationship employees
0.175 information systems paper use design case important used context provide presented authors concepts order number
0.167 network networks social analysis ties structure p2p exchange externalities individual impact peer-to-peer structural growth centrality
0.125 role roles gender differences women significant play age men plays sample differ played vary understand
0.118 case study studies paper use research analysis interpretive identify qualitative approach understanding critical development managerial
0.108 satisfaction information systems study characteristics data results using user related field survey empirical quality hypotheses

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Mandviwalla, Munir 2 Wattal, Sunil 1
broadband policy 1 corporate blogs 1 digital divide 1 information infrastructure 1
interpretive case study 1 multilevel 1 network externalities 1 sociotechnical systems 1
social computing 1 social networks 1 telecommunications policy 1 technology usage 1
universal access 1 universal use 1

Articles (2)

Moving from Access to Use of the Information Infrastructure: A Multilevel Sociotechnical Framework. (Information Systems Research, 2013)
Authors: Abstract:
    Universal access (UA) to the Internet and the associated information infrastructure has become an important economic and societal goal. However, UA initiatives tend to focus on issues such as physical access and geographical ubiquity, and they measure adoption through penetration rates. In this paper, we apply an interpretive case study approach to analyze the Philadelphia wireless initiative to provide insights into the nature of UA and extend this concept to also consider universal use (UU). UU is important because simply providing access does not guarantee use. UU is presented as a conceptual goal that starts with the challenge of physical access, but which necessarily also leads to considerations of use. The results show that the human and technological elements underlying individual access and use are deeply embedded within various institutional elements and collectives that enable but also constrain meaningful use. We integrate our findings into a multilevel framework that shows how access and use are influenced by both micro and macro factors. This framework provides new insights into the study of the information infrastructure, digital divide, and public policy.
Network Externalities and Technology Use: A Quantitative Analysis of Intraorganizational Blogs. (Journal of Management Information Systems, 2010)
Authors: Abstract:
    The article presents the results of a study which examined the use of blogs in a corporate context, focusing on the social aspects of such information systems. The role of network externalities, positive feedback, and the demographic variables of age and gender were analyzed. The results of the study indicated that network effects were stronger for younger users and women, and strongest for relational networks. The effect of age was nonlinear. Positive feedback and use of blogs by managers correlated with increased blogging.