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Bongsik Shin

Researcher at College of Business Administration

Publications -  47
Citations -  3252

Bongsik Shin is an academic researcher from College of Business Administration. The author has contributed to research in topics: Information system & Information quality. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 47 publications receiving 2846 citations. Previous affiliations of Bongsik Shin include University of Nebraska Omaha & University of Arizona.

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Understanding dynamics between initial trust and usage intentions of mobile banking

TL;DR: The analysis showed that three variables had a significant effect on initial trust in mobile banking, and the perception of initial trust and relative benefits was vital in promoting personal intention to make use of related services, whereas the reputation as a firm characteristics variable failed to attract people to mobile banking.
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Data quality management, data usage experience and acquisition intention of big data analytics

TL;DR: A research model is proposed to explain the acquisition intention of big data analytics mainly from the theoretical perspectives of data quality management and data usage experience and empirical investigation reveals that a firm's intention for big data Analytics can be positively affected by its competence in maintaining the quality of corporate data.
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IT Capabilities, Process-Oriented Dynamic Capabilities, and Firm Financial Performance*

TL;DR: From the analysis of the survey data, an important route of causality is found, as follows: IT personnel expertise, IT management capabilities, IT infrastructure flexibility, and process-oriented dynamic capabilities, and financial performance are found.
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An Exploratory Investigation of System Success Factors in Data Warehousing

TL;DR: An exploratory study was conducted to improve general understanding of data warehousing issues from the perspective of IS success, and showed that user satisfaction with the data warehouse was significantly affected by such system quality factors as data quality, data locatability, and system throughput.
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Understanding post-adoption usage of mobile data services: The role of supplier-side variables

TL;DR: Information quality had a stronger influence on MDS usage increase when the main motive was utilitarian rather than hedonic, and system quality was negatively associated with usage decrease, but information quality was not.