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Journal ArticleDOI

Information technology to support electronic meetings

TLDR
A new term for information technology systems that support group meetings: electronic meeting systems (EMS) is proposed and defined, which are more than group decision support systems (GDSS) and focus on communication.
Abstract
As managers spend more of their time in meetings, the study of information technology to support meetings becomes increasingly important. Several unique systems to support meetings electronically have been developed in industry and universities. The PLEXSYS systems at the University of Arizona have been operational since 1985 and are now being implemented in industrial sites. This article proposes and defines a new term for information technology systems that support group meetings: electronic meeting systems (EMS). EMSs are more than group decision support systems (GDSS): they support more tasks than just decision making; they focus on communication. They move beyond the GDSS decision room where groups must meet at the same time in the same place, to meetings that can be conducted across time ands pace. The article then presents a model fo th EMS concept, which has three components: group process and outcomes; methods; and environment. Each of these component is explained in turn, and the implications derived form their study to date are discussed. Finally, the implementation of information technology for meeting support and its use in corporate settings will be addressed, as it has implications for productivity, meeting size, group member participat9ion, and the role of the IS department.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Design science in information systems research

TL;DR: The objective is to describe the performance of design-science research in Information Systems via a concise conceptual framework and clear guidelines for understanding, executing, and evaluating the research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Computer-Mediated Communication Impersonal, Interpersonal, and Hyperpersonal Interaction

TL;DR: The authors reviewed the history of computer mediated communication and found that impersonal communication is sometimes advantageous, and strategies for the intentional depersonalization of media use are inferred, with implications for Group Decision Support Systems effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Capturing the Complexity in Advanced Technology Use: Adaptive Structuration Theory

TL;DR: Adaptive structuration theory (AST) as mentioned in this paper examines the change process from two vantage points: (1) the types of structures that are provided by advanced technologies, and (2) the structures that actually emerge in human action as people interact with these technologies.
Journal ArticleDOI

The interdisciplinary study of coordination

TL;DR: This survey characterizes an emerging research area, sometimes called coordination theory, that focuses on the interdisciplinary study of coordination, that uses and extends ideas about coordination from disciplines such as computer science, organization theory, operations research, economics, linguistics, and psychology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Groupware: some issues and experiences

TL;DR: C categories and examples of groupware are described and some underlying research and development issues are discussed and GROVE, a novel group editor, is explained in some detail as a salient groupware example.
References
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Book

The nature of managerial work

TL;DR: The Manager's Working Roles: A Survey of the Managerial Work of Five Chief Executives as discussed by the authors is a survey of the work of five chief executives in the 1990s.
Book

Social psychological aspects of computer-mediated communication

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore how people participate in computer-mediated communication and how computerization affects group efforts to reach consensus, and they find that participants are more likely to report negative effects of computer mediated communication on their mental health.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social psychological aspects of computer-mediated communication.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore how people participate in computer-mediated communication and how computerization affects group efforts to reach consensus, and they find that participants are more likely to report negative effects of computer mediated communication on their mental health.
Journal ArticleDOI

A foundation for the study of group decision support systems

TL;DR: A conceptual overview of GDSS based on an information-exchange perspective of decision making is presented, and a multi-dimensional taxonomy of systems is proposed as an organizing framework for research in the area.
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