Start Date
10-12-2017 12:00 AM
Description
The success of collaboration platforms depends on the degree to which users incorporate generic platform features into their particular collaborative actions. Yet, little is known about the processes through which users perceive and actualize the potentials for action, or affordances, offered by collaboration platforms. We report the results of an exploratory case study in which we accompanied collaboration platform users over a period of over two years. We find that users perceive affordances through three alternative processes: imitating, exploring, and transferring. After perceiving affordances, users often need to arrange for configuration to enable the perceived action potential. Configuration can be found in three forms: delegated, guided, or autonomous configuration. Our emerging theory suggests that these perception and actualization processes depend in complex ways on individual-level (knowledge, self-efficacy, perceived complexity) and on higher-level factors (advice networks, collective knowledge). Our study helps open the black box of affordance perception and actualization processes.
Recommended Citation
Lehrig, Tim; Krancher, Oliver; and Dibbern, Jens, "How Users Perceive and Actualize Affordances: An Exploratory Case Study of Collaboration Platforms" (2017). ICIS 2017 Proceedings. 38.
https://aisel.aisnet.org/icis2017/HumanBehavior/Presentations/38
How Users Perceive and Actualize Affordances: An Exploratory Case Study of Collaboration Platforms
The success of collaboration platforms depends on the degree to which users incorporate generic platform features into their particular collaborative actions. Yet, little is known about the processes through which users perceive and actualize the potentials for action, or affordances, offered by collaboration platforms. We report the results of an exploratory case study in which we accompanied collaboration platform users over a period of over two years. We find that users perceive affordances through three alternative processes: imitating, exploring, and transferring. After perceiving affordances, users often need to arrange for configuration to enable the perceived action potential. Configuration can be found in three forms: delegated, guided, or autonomous configuration. Our emerging theory suggests that these perception and actualization processes depend in complex ways on individual-level (knowledge, self-efficacy, perceived complexity) and on higher-level factors (advice networks, collective knowledge). Our study helps open the black box of affordance perception and actualization processes.