Author List: Dimoka, Angelika; Banker, Rajiv D.; Benbasat, Izak; Davis, Fred D.; Dennis, Alan R.; Gefen, David;
MIS Quarterly, 2012, Volume 36, Issue 3, Page 679-A19.
This article discusses the role of commonly used neurophysiological tools such as psychophysiological tools (e.g., EKG, eye tracking) and neuroimaging tools (e.g., fMRI, EEG) in Information Systems research. There is heated interest now in the social sciences in capturing presumably objective data directly from the human body, and this interest in neurophysiological tools has also been gaining momentum in IS research (termed NeuroIS). This article first reviews commonly used neurophysiological tools with regard to their major strengths and weaknesses. It then discusses several promising application areas and research questions where IS researchers can benefit from the use of neurophysiological data. The proposed research topics are presented within three thematic areas: (1) development and use of systems, (2) IS strategy and business outcomes, and (3) group work and decision support. The article concludes with recommendations on how to use neurophysiological tools in IS research along with a set of practical suggestions for developing a research agenda for NeuroIS and establishing NeuroIS as a viable subfield in the IS literature.
Keywords: neuroimaging; NeuroIS; neurophysiological tools; neuroscience; psychophysiological tools
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#290 0.458 emotions research fmri emotional neuroscience study brain neurois emotion functional neurophysiological distrust cognitive related imaging tools effects warnings magnetic turn
#222 0.126 research researchers framework future information systems important present agenda identify areas provide understanding contributions using literature studies paper potential review
#65 0.082 article information author discusses comments technology paper presents states explains editor's authors issue focuses topics include suggests systems role editorial
#292 0.063 information research literature systems framework review paper theoretical based potential future implications practice discussed current concept propositions findings provided extant
#174 0.059 use support information effective behaviors work usage examine extent users expertise uses longitudinal focus routine revealed volume constructs contributes operations