2020 | ||
Monday, August 10th | ||
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12:00 AM |
A Comparative Study of Self-congruency Models for Self-disclosure on Social Networking Sites Asim Shrestha, Arkansas Tech University 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Vasilka Chergarova, Florida International University 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Blockchain for Development: Preliminary Insights from a Literature Review Paulo Rupino da Cunha, University of Coimbra 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Critical Mass in Inter-Organizational Platforms Rodreck David, Victoria University of Wellington 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Do “Digital” Firms Live Longer as Fields Converge? A Survival Analysis of the S&P 500 Nicholas Berente, University of Notre Dame 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Document Verification using Blockchain for Trusted CV Information Venkata Marella, Aalto University 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Enterprise Systems in the Public Sector: A Literature Review Narcyz Roztocki, SUNY New Paltz 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Formal Specification, Implementation, and Evaluation of the AdoBPRIM Approach Rafika Thabet, Toulouse University, INPT 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Soyeon Kim, Yonsei University 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
From Augmented Reality to Augmented Product: Initial Study of AR Marketing in the Wine Industry Guillaume Faddoul, San Francisco State University 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Future Challenges in Decision Mining at Governmental Institutions Sam Leewis, Digital Ethics 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Bjoern Asdecker, University of Bamberg 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
ICT Regulation Process: Habermas Meets The Multiple Streams Framework José Antonio Gouvêa Galhardo, University of São Paulo 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Machine Learning in SME: An Empirical Study on Enablers and Success Factors Markus Bauer, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Dirk Weitzel, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Organizational Information in the Cloud of Interaction E Burton Swanson, UCLA Anderson School 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Requirements and Design Principles for Business Model Tools Norman Schaffer, fortiss GmbH 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Ten Lightweight Systems Analysis and Design Tools Based on Work System Theory and Its Extensions Steven Alter, University of San Francisco 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
The Complementarity between Foreign and Native IT Workers: Evidence from an Industry-Level Analysis Gang Peng, California State University Fullerton 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Taeyoung Kim, Yonsei University 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Dirk Weitzel, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Theorizing Information Exchange among Multiple Stakeholders to Support Decision Making Ali Mohammed Bazarah, Claremont Graduate University 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Towards Transformative Analytics for Palliative Care Mateusz Kupper, University College Cork 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Using Accelerometer and Gyroscope Data in Common Mobile Devices to Assess Credibility Joseph S. Valacich, University of Arizona 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Using Accountability Theory to Determine How Curiosity Affects Policy Compliance Philip Menard, University of Texas at San Antonio 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
When and How to Advertise? An Empirical Study on Mobile Ad Response Based on Contextual Factors Janine Anne Telles Laddaran, Yonsei University 12:00 AM |
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12:00 AM |
Winning AI Strategy: Six-Steps to Create Value from Artificial Intelligence Sulaiman Abdallah Alsheibani, Monash university 12:00 AM |
This track serves as the nexus of converging interests for researchers in the field who might have specific interests in topics not easily reconciled with existing mainstream SIG-based AMCIS Tracks. We will be specifically interested in research that might not find good fit with mainstream areas of information systems research, and we also welcome methodological plurality, with explicit interests in innovative, provocative, and experimental approaches to both topical and methodological coverage.
To that end, this track serves as the primary point of contribution and subsequent publication of innovative research on information systems across a wide range of topic areas, particularly those topics not addressed by other tracks. This track showcases unique and leading edge regarding the state, practice, antecedents and consequences of management information systems as a field of practice, as an artifact of business and its processes, and as a scholarly field of endeavor.