Author List: Lowry, Paul Benjamin; Jr., Nicholas C. Romano; Jenkins, Jeffrey L.; Guthrie, Randy W.;
Journal of Management Information Systems, 2009, Volume 26, Issue 1, Page 155-195.
Process satisfaction is one important determinant of work group collaborative system adoption, continuance, and performance. We explicate the computer-mediated communication (CMC) interactivity model (CMCIM) to explain and predict how interactivity enhances communication quality that results in increased process satisfaction in CMC-supported work groups. We operationalize this model in the challenging context of very large groups using extremely lean CMC. We tested it with a rigorous field experiment and analyzed the results with the latest structural equation modeling techniques. Interactivity and communication quality dramatically improved for very large groups using highly lean CMC (audience response systems) over face-to- face groups. Moreover, CMC groups had fewer negative status effects and higher process satisfaction than face-to-face groups. The practical applications of lean CMC rival theoretical applications in importance because lean CMC is relatively inexpensive and requires minimal training and support compared to other media. The results may aid large global work group continuance, satisfaction, and performance in systems, product and strategy development, and other processes in which status effects and communication issues regularly have negative influences on outcomes.
Keywords: audience response systems; CMC interactivity model (CMCIM); collaboration; human--computer interaction (HCI); interactivity; large groups; ultra-lean interactive media; ultra-lean interactivity
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#203 0.288 communication media computer-mediated e-mail richness electronic cmc mail medium message performance convergence used communications messages face-to-face findings participants results work
#265 0.145 collaborative groups feedback group work collective individuals higher effects efficacy perceived tasks members environment writing experiment did task intelligence compared
#276 0.143 satisfaction information systems study characteristics data results using user related field survey empirical quality hypotheses important success various indicate tested
#152 0.087 software development process performance agile processes developers response tailoring activities specific requirements teams quality improvement outcomes productivity improve fit maturity
#162 0.076 structural modeling scale equation implications economies large future framework perspective propose broad scope resulting identified leading analyzed second interviews analysis