Author List: Mackay, Jane M.; Elam, Joyce J.;
Information Systems Research, 1992, Volume 3, Issue 2, Page 150-172.
This paper reports the results of a study that examined the way that professionals used a particular decision aid, spreadsheet software, to address a business-oriented task. The professionals were divided into four groups, depending on whether they were experts or novices in the functional area of business represented by the task and on whether they were experts or novices in the use of spreadsheet software. The physical interactions as well as the thought processes underlying these interactions were captured. Results of the study indicated that a lack of expertise in spreadsheet software usage inhibited the application of functional area knowledge. The behavior and outcomes of the functional area expert/spreadsheet novice group did not match those of the functional area expert/spreadsheet expert group. In fact, they paralleled more closely those of the other two groups that did not possess functional area knowledge. Results of the study also indicated that individuals need to obtain a level of expertise in using a decision aid before they are able to apply their functional area knowledge to the problem at hand.
Keywords: decision aids;DSS;problem solving;decision making;human-computer interaction
Algorithm:

List of Topics

#9 0.380 using subjects results study experiment did conducted task time used experienced use preference experimental presented decision-making empirical significantly effects better
#68 0.121 business units study unit executives functional managers technology linkage need areas information long-term operations plans mission large understand knowledge current
#188 0.121 processes interaction new interactions temporal structure research emergent process theory address temporally core discussion focuses area underlying deep structures way
#129 0.120 expert systems knowledge knowledge-based human intelligent experts paper problem acquisition base used expertise intelligence domain inductive rules machine artificial task
#177 0.071 decision accuracy aid aids prediction experiment effects accurate support making preferences interaction judgment hybrid perceptual strategy account context restrictiveness taking