Author List: Lam, Simon S.K.;
Journal of Management Information Systems, 1997, Volume 13, Issue 4, Page 193-215.
This research examines whether structures of decision tasks moderate the effects of group decision support systems (GDSS) on patterns of group communication and decision quality of decision-making groups. It seeks to show that the effects of GDSS on decision-making processes and outcomes are task-structure-dependent, and the effects of GDSS cannot be evaluated on the basis of outcomes alone; decision processes must also be evaluated in order to understand how decisions are made and why GDSS can improve group outcomes in some situations but provide negative effects in others. A controlled laboratory experiment was conducted with a 2 x 3 factorial between-subjects design, manipulating two independent variables: levels of support (GDSS support and no support) and task structures (additive, disjunctive, and conjunctive). Practicing managers were chosen as subjects. The discussion records of the decision-making process were coded using a coding scheme. These communication patterns formed the first dependent variables. Another dependent variable was decision quality. The results support the hypothesis that the structures of a decision task moderate the effects of GDSS on both the patterns of group communication and the decision quality of a decision-making group. GDSS significantly improve decision quality in disjunctive and conjunctive tasks. GDSS also significantly alter patterns of group communication in disjunctive and conjunctive tasks. However, no significant differences in decision quality and patterns of group communication exist between groups using GDSS and face-to-face groups in additive tasks.
Keywords: decision tasks and processes; group decision quality; group decision support systems.
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#257 0.489 group support groups meeting gdss decision systems meetings technology study electronic ems task process communication computer-supported outcomes quality consensus face-to-face
#8 0.185 decision making decisions decision-making makers use quality improve performance managers process better results time managerial task significantly help indicate maker
#285 0.122 effects effect research data studies empirical information literature different interaction analysis implications findings results important set large provide using paper
#9 0.093 using subjects results study experiment did conducted task time used experienced use preference experimental presented decision-making empirical significantly effects better
#254 0.063 level levels higher patterns activity results structures lower evolution significant analysis degree data discussed implications stable cluster exist relationships identify