简洁的美德

IF 6.5 2区 管理学 Q1 INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE
Robert M. Davison, Rens Scheepers, Stefan Henningsson, Stan Karanasios
{"title":"简洁的美德","authors":"Robert M. Davison,&nbsp;Rens Scheepers,&nbsp;Stefan Henningsson,&nbsp;Stan Karanasios","doi":"10.1111/isj.12492","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Before the rise of online-only publishing, journals, including the ISJ, operated with page budgets, which determined the annual limit of pages that could be published. A decade ago, at the ISJ, this amounted to some 576 journal pages. However, with the advent of online-only publishing, the concept of a page budget has disappeared. The total number of pages increased gradually, at first to 666, to 800 and then it jumped to over 1000. Wiley, the publisher of the ISJ, has informed us that there is no limit at all to how many pages (or articles) we can publish a year, so long as quality standards are maintained. In 2023, the ISJ published 43 research articles, 8 editorials and 3 book reviews, a total of 1458 journal pages or 253% of the pre-online-only model. We expect that in future these numbers will continue to rise.</p><p>Not only has the number of accepted articles increased but also has their length. It used to be the case that we requested authors to keep within 8000 words. This was supposed to be an all-inclusive word count from title to references and appendices. With the passing of time, the restrictions of paper length have largely disappeared. Table 1 below presents the guidance given to authors for the AIS Senior Scholars' List of Premier Journals as well as several others. While there is some wiggle room, the general guidance tends to sit within the 8000- to 12 000-word range, or 38–55 pages. This is similar to adjacent fields: the <i>Academy of Management Journal</i> allows 40 double-spaced pages including references, tables, figures and appendices,1 and Organisation Studies permits up to 13 000 words encompassing references, tables, figures and appendices.2 Computer Science journals tend to publish briefer papers. For instance, IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence allows 35 double spaced pages3 and IEEE Communications Surveys &amp; Tutorials charges authors $220 for per page over 30 pages (up to 8 pages).4</p><p>Today it is not unusual for a first-round submission to be in the 12 000-word range and for a finally accepted article to be 15 000. Even 20 000-word epics are by no means unheard of. Why all this verbosity? One reason is that authors and reviewers get trapped in what we call a text-accumulation trap. Authors submit papers with as much information as possible, hoping to instil confidence in the review team as to its completeness, as well as to prepare for both expected and unexpected reviewer demands. Reviewers then read the paper, yet ask for even more detail, and authors feel obliged to respond in kind. Over multiple revision cycles, satisfying all the reviewers requires ever more words. Reviewers should be mindful of the text-accumulation trap. When requesting authors to incorporate large amounts of new material, it is necessary to weigh the value of this extra material against the risk of unnecessarily bloating the manuscript.</p><p>In addition, it is easier to write more than less, easier to include more literature, more cross-references, more examples, more arguments and more details. In contrast, it is harder to be parsimonious with words, even if our theories are often lauded for their parsimony. Blaise Pascal noted in the 17th century ‘I would have written a shorter letter, but I did not have the time’.5 It takes much careful thought to reduce the length of a manuscript, yet to preserve the essential message.</p><p>Editors used to say things like ‘your article is accepted but … I need you to cut at least 3,000 words’. However, with the page-budget restrictions of print journals largely gone, editors are less inclined to make such demands. We have not seen such a request in many years and our less experienced readers may be shocked to read this historical anecdote! With the disappearance of this means of reducing manuscript length, the previously balanced system is now out of balance. As a result, submitted manuscripts get ever longer, ever more turgid and, regrettably, ever less enjoyable to read.</p><p>In this editorial, we argue for brevity rather than verbosity. First, it is instructive to draw analogies with the short story, as opposed to the epic novel. Boyd (<span>2005</span>, p. 238) writes that ‘there are twenty-page short stories that are far more charged and gravid with meaning than 400-page novels’. Is the same true for work in our own field? Would our work be more impactful, more read, more appreciated if it was shorter, crisper and more precise and if we took the time and trouble to alembicate our insights before submitting them for review? For authors, there are several reasons to submit a shorter, more concise manuscript.</p><p>One is that the main ideas will stand out more clearly, not be hidden among text that becomes noise precluding the reader from getting to the main message. No manuscript will attract support from reviewers if its contributions are invisible.</p><p>Another reason is that reviewers almost invariably suggest modifications and additions that need to be undertaken before the manuscript can be accepted. If the manuscript is already long, adding text means that something else may have to be deleted which can create new issues and the feeling of a lack of progress.</p><p>As we enter the era of generative AI, there is the potential for a rise in the number of submissions that are well written and grammatically correct but that drown in their own verbosity, constituting clear exemplification of unnecessary padding. The flip side of this, as many of us have experienced, involves students resorting to AI tools to summarise a paper. Although this adds some value, it also highlights the downside of papers that are overly verbose: the initial response from many readers is a reluctance to read it.</p><p>Finally, we observe that it is increasingly difficult to find people who are willing to review 12,000- to 20,000-word monster submissions! Potential reviewers reply to invitations, saying ‘yes, I like the topic and I know the method, so I am willing in principle to review it, but … how long is the manuscript?’. When the truth is revealed and they see that they are in for a marathon read-and-digest effort, their willingness to continue wilts noticeably. A few do stay the course, but to get two good reviews, we may have to invite 15–20 people, which unavoidably delays the whole review process. It might be better to start off with a shorter submission of 6000 words and to revise it upwards towards 8000, rather than starting with 12 and heading for 20.</p><p>Beyond the rather tedious exposition of numbers, there are arguments for the value of brevity itself. A haiku, or a call for laconicism, takes the analogy too far, but we should be contemplating how we can focus our thoughts on what really matters and distilling our research into consumable portions. Maybe we can take a cue from journals like Nature or The Lancet that deal with complex concepts and life-saving studies, while keeping word counts under 5000.</p><p>A genre where this is particularly apparent is the practitioner paper. We seriously doubt if practitioners, as readers, have the time, energy and patience to wade through excessively long articles. At the ISJ, we ask that practitioner papers not exceed 8000 words, inclusive of all contents.6 We also have detailed guidelines and address the topic of practitioner papers in a recent editorial (Davison et al., <span>2023</span>). Practitioner papers should mirror genres commonly used in formal business communication: <i>concise and to the point</i> business reports and memos. Abstracts should read as executive summaries, focusing on the real-world context of problems and key recommendations. It is no surprise that the Harvard Business Review asks authors to submit an 800-word narrative. Practitioners are more likely to value shorter, more pithy work that dispenses with unnecessary literature, method and analysis, though this material could be retained in an appendix. Practitioners value what you are doing and why: the motivation, problematisation and question. They will want some background, but not in excess, and only to help them ensure whether the situation is applicable to their specific context. They probably do not want excessive references. They will want to know briefly what you did and how, but will value more the prescriptive (and proscriptive) recommendations that you have the confidence to make. This implies a writing style focused on action for the practitioner reader who faces these real-world problems or challenges. However, do not mistake the call for brevity for abandoning a logical chain of reasoning from observation to recommendations. Indeed, practitioners will want to assess the believability of recommendations especially if these have substantial, even existential implications for their organisations. It may be that this shorter version of the research output should parallel a longer version. Use concise tables and informative figures to condense verbose text in the body of a paper. Ancillary materials could be consigned to an online appendix. Communications of the ACM, some years ago, specified a tight word length (4000), a short list of references (max 10) and tables/figures (max 4 each). That may be too restrictive for our tastes, but even if we increase the numbers by 50% the result will still be consumable.</p><p>In this second issue of volume 34, we present eight articles.</p><p>In the first article, van Offenbeek et al. (<span>2024</span>) note that when there are misfits between information systems and people's work practices, workarounds often emerge in response. In complex work environments, working around information systems is regularly required to get tasks done. Many workarounds are functional and may become legitimate practices. However, in the current study, the authors show how some workarounds can, in turn, lead to new or increased misfits for subsequent users. The authors report on a multi-year, in-depth, qualitative exploration of the use of an electronic health record system in two tertiary hospitals. The authors report how escalating patterns of misfits and workarounds emerge through the interplay among work practice routineness, misfit characteristics and non-compliant workaround behaviours. By differentiating the concept of non-compliance, the authors arrive at a conceptual distinction between, on the one hand, three misfit-aggravating workaround patterns and, on the other hand, those that leave the misfit unaffected or even reduce it.</p><p>In the second article, Gong et al. (<span>2024</span>) suggest that social factors play a critical role in motivating player participation and commitment to online multiplayer games. Many popular mobile massively multiplayer online games (MMOGs) adopt social network embeddedness (SNE) functions to optimise players' social play experience. SNE changes the traditional pattern of MMOG social play by porting acquaintance relationships (e.g., Facebook friends) from social networking sites to the virtual game world. Drawing on the affordance framework and social capital literature, the authors propose a theoretical model that integrates the factors of SNE technology affordance (identity transparency and information transparency), players' social experience (social interaction, social support, shared vision and social pressure) and affordance effects (play performance and play frequency). The model was validated through a longitudinal field study, in which both subjective and objective data were collected. The study enhances the theoretical understanding of social relationships in players' game participation results from the SNE aspect.</p><p>In the third article, Müller and Sæbø (<span>2024</span>) describe how the <i>Scandinavian Journal of Information Systems</i> was hijacked by cybercriminals who created a fraudulent website to scam authors. The criminals sent fake acceptance letters and charged authors for publication, while the website appeared legitimate and was linked to Scopus, Elsevier's well-known citation database. The Editor-in-Chief discovered the scam after an author reported receiving both an acceptance letter and a desk rejection for her manuscript. The investigation revealed that several authors had been scammed, and the fraudulent website appeared in online searches. Despite reporting the crime to various authorities, the fraudulent site remains operational, highlighting the difficulties in stopping such cybercrimes. The authors discuss implications for the IS community and strategies for combating this nascent threat.</p><p>In the fourth article, Laumer et al. (<span>2024</span>) examine the conditions under which applicants in personnel selection processes perceive algorithms to be fair and develop a theoretical foundation for algorithmic fairness perceptions. Drawing on an online application scenario with eight experimental groups (<i>n</i> = 801), the authors analyse the determinants for algorithmic fairness perceptions and the impact of interventions that are based on transparency and anthropomorphism. Embedded in a stimulus-organism-response framework and drawing from organisational justice theory, the authors reveal four justice dimensions (procedural, distributive, interpersonal and informational) that determine algorithmic fairness perceptions. The results further show that transparency and anthropomorphism interventions primarily mainly affect dimensions of interpersonal and informational justice and highlight the importance of algorithmic fairness perceptions as critical determinants for individual choices.</p><p>In the fifth article, Durani et al. (<span>2024</span>) recount how historically, gatekeepers, like elites and institutions, controlled visual information to serve their agendas. However, the rise of social media has given rise to ‘visual audience gatekeeping’, where users shape information flow. This evolution offers empowerment but is not without risks, as visual content's persuasive nature can be exploited for persuasion and manipulation. The authors scrutinise visual audience gatekeeping in the context of the Russo-Ukrainian War, focusing on a Russia-related Reddit subforum. As audience gatekeepers, users disseminate visual content that aligns with their embraced social reality. The outcome is a ‘visual echo chamber’ characterised by limited information diversity, thereby corroborating but seldom interrogating the worldviews of audience gatekeepers. Amid heightened tension, this cycle intensifies, increasing the potential for radical visual narratives to gain ground. The study culminates in a novel theoretical model of visual audience gatekeeping, offering broad implications for the fields of visual communication, gatekeeping theory and social media platforms.</p><p>In the sixth article, Hardin et al. (<span>2024</span>) use a theory-driven, deductive approach to examine the concept of virtual team efficacy. The authors draw on social cognitive theory and trust theory to develop a research model in which virtual team efficacy relates indirectly to virtual team outcomes through trust and perceptions of problems with time differences, geographical separation and cultural differences. Findings from a multi-wave survey administered during a comprehensive virtual team project confirm the research model hypotheses. The authors conclude by emphasising the importance of expanding the virtual team efficacy nomological network because, unlike collective efficacy concepts developed for traditional team settings, virtual team efficacy focuses on the technological components characteristic of virtual team projects.</p><p>In the seventh article, Lumbard et al. (<span>2024</span>) examine how open-source software continues to play a critical part of our shared digital infrastructure. The authors explore how open-source software is understood to meet acceptable standards of health and sustainability as it is relied on as a key component of organisational work. Open-source community research has explored issues of health and sustainability, often focusing on the characteristics of single open-source projects. Using social comparison as a research frame, the authors explore how open-source project health and sustainability are understood, not in isolation, but across communities within software ecosystems. The authors provide insights for how people explore and compare interactions present across open-source communities, demonstrating open-source community health, not a set of discrete metrics, but is an ongoing social construction.</p><p>In the eighth article, Aguirre-Urreta et al. (<span>2024</span>) engage with the debate on formative modelling (‘formative measurement’) in the information systems discipline and in particular the claim that measurement model misspecification, where a reflective model is used instead of a more appropriate formative model, is widespread. The authors argue that this misspecification cannot be true because models mis-specified in this way would fail the measurement validation procedures used with reflective models and thus would not be publishable. The authors present two extensive simulation studies to support their contention. The simulation results show that in most cases where data originate from a formative model, estimating a reflective model would not produce results that satisfy the commonly used measurement validation guidelines. Based on these results, they conclude that widespread publication of models where the direction of measurement is mis-specified is unlikely in IS and other disciplines that use similar measurement validation guidelines. Building on recent discussions on modelling endogenous formatively specified latent variables, they also demonstrate that the effects of misspecification are minor in models that do pass the model quality check. Their results address important issues in the literature on the consequences of measurement model misspecification and provide a starting point for new advances in this area.</p>","PeriodicalId":48049,"journal":{"name":"Information Systems Journal","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":6.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/isj.12492","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The virtue of brevity\",\"authors\":\"Robert M. Davison,&nbsp;Rens Scheepers,&nbsp;Stefan Henningsson,&nbsp;Stan Karanasios\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/isj.12492\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Before the rise of online-only publishing, journals, including the ISJ, operated with page budgets, which determined the annual limit of pages that could be published. A decade ago, at the ISJ, this amounted to some 576 journal pages. However, with the advent of online-only publishing, the concept of a page budget has disappeared. The total number of pages increased gradually, at first to 666, to 800 and then it jumped to over 1000. Wiley, the publisher of the ISJ, has informed us that there is no limit at all to how many pages (or articles) we can publish a year, so long as quality standards are maintained. In 2023, the ISJ published 43 research articles, 8 editorials and 3 book reviews, a total of 1458 journal pages or 253% of the pre-online-only model. We expect that in future these numbers will continue to rise.</p><p>Not only has the number of accepted articles increased but also has their length. It used to be the case that we requested authors to keep within 8000 words. This was supposed to be an all-inclusive word count from title to references and appendices. With the passing of time, the restrictions of paper length have largely disappeared. Table 1 below presents the guidance given to authors for the AIS Senior Scholars' List of Premier Journals as well as several others. While there is some wiggle room, the general guidance tends to sit within the 8000- to 12 000-word range, or 38–55 pages. This is similar to adjacent fields: the <i>Academy of Management Journal</i> allows 40 double-spaced pages including references, tables, figures and appendices,1 and Organisation Studies permits up to 13 000 words encompassing references, tables, figures and appendices.2 Computer Science journals tend to publish briefer papers. For instance, IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence allows 35 double spaced pages3 and IEEE Communications Surveys &amp; Tutorials charges authors $220 for per page over 30 pages (up to 8 pages).4</p><p>Today it is not unusual for a first-round submission to be in the 12 000-word range and for a finally accepted article to be 15 000. Even 20 000-word epics are by no means unheard of. Why all this verbosity? One reason is that authors and reviewers get trapped in what we call a text-accumulation trap. Authors submit papers with as much information as possible, hoping to instil confidence in the review team as to its completeness, as well as to prepare for both expected and unexpected reviewer demands. Reviewers then read the paper, yet ask for even more detail, and authors feel obliged to respond in kind. Over multiple revision cycles, satisfying all the reviewers requires ever more words. Reviewers should be mindful of the text-accumulation trap. When requesting authors to incorporate large amounts of new material, it is necessary to weigh the value of this extra material against the risk of unnecessarily bloating the manuscript.</p><p>In addition, it is easier to write more than less, easier to include more literature, more cross-references, more examples, more arguments and more details. In contrast, it is harder to be parsimonious with words, even if our theories are often lauded for their parsimony. Blaise Pascal noted in the 17th century ‘I would have written a shorter letter, but I did not have the time’.5 It takes much careful thought to reduce the length of a manuscript, yet to preserve the essential message.</p><p>Editors used to say things like ‘your article is accepted but … I need you to cut at least 3,000 words’. However, with the page-budget restrictions of print journals largely gone, editors are less inclined to make such demands. We have not seen such a request in many years and our less experienced readers may be shocked to read this historical anecdote! With the disappearance of this means of reducing manuscript length, the previously balanced system is now out of balance. As a result, submitted manuscripts get ever longer, ever more turgid and, regrettably, ever less enjoyable to read.</p><p>In this editorial, we argue for brevity rather than verbosity. First, it is instructive to draw analogies with the short story, as opposed to the epic novel. Boyd (<span>2005</span>, p. 238) writes that ‘there are twenty-page short stories that are far more charged and gravid with meaning than 400-page novels’. Is the same true for work in our own field? Would our work be more impactful, more read, more appreciated if it was shorter, crisper and more precise and if we took the time and trouble to alembicate our insights before submitting them for review? For authors, there are several reasons to submit a shorter, more concise manuscript.</p><p>One is that the main ideas will stand out more clearly, not be hidden among text that becomes noise precluding the reader from getting to the main message. No manuscript will attract support from reviewers if its contributions are invisible.</p><p>Another reason is that reviewers almost invariably suggest modifications and additions that need to be undertaken before the manuscript can be accepted. If the manuscript is already long, adding text means that something else may have to be deleted which can create new issues and the feeling of a lack of progress.</p><p>As we enter the era of generative AI, there is the potential for a rise in the number of submissions that are well written and grammatically correct but that drown in their own verbosity, constituting clear exemplification of unnecessary padding. The flip side of this, as many of us have experienced, involves students resorting to AI tools to summarise a paper. Although this adds some value, it also highlights the downside of papers that are overly verbose: the initial response from many readers is a reluctance to read it.</p><p>Finally, we observe that it is increasingly difficult to find people who are willing to review 12,000- to 20,000-word monster submissions! Potential reviewers reply to invitations, saying ‘yes, I like the topic and I know the method, so I am willing in principle to review it, but … how long is the manuscript?’. When the truth is revealed and they see that they are in for a marathon read-and-digest effort, their willingness to continue wilts noticeably. A few do stay the course, but to get two good reviews, we may have to invite 15–20 people, which unavoidably delays the whole review process. It might be better to start off with a shorter submission of 6000 words and to revise it upwards towards 8000, rather than starting with 12 and heading for 20.</p><p>Beyond the rather tedious exposition of numbers, there are arguments for the value of brevity itself. A haiku, or a call for laconicism, takes the analogy too far, but we should be contemplating how we can focus our thoughts on what really matters and distilling our research into consumable portions. Maybe we can take a cue from journals like Nature or The Lancet that deal with complex concepts and life-saving studies, while keeping word counts under 5000.</p><p>A genre where this is particularly apparent is the practitioner paper. We seriously doubt if practitioners, as readers, have the time, energy and patience to wade through excessively long articles. At the ISJ, we ask that practitioner papers not exceed 8000 words, inclusive of all contents.6 We also have detailed guidelines and address the topic of practitioner papers in a recent editorial (Davison et al., <span>2023</span>). Practitioner papers should mirror genres commonly used in formal business communication: <i>concise and to the point</i> business reports and memos. Abstracts should read as executive summaries, focusing on the real-world context of problems and key recommendations. It is no surprise that the Harvard Business Review asks authors to submit an 800-word narrative. Practitioners are more likely to value shorter, more pithy work that dispenses with unnecessary literature, method and analysis, though this material could be retained in an appendix. Practitioners value what you are doing and why: the motivation, problematisation and question. They will want some background, but not in excess, and only to help them ensure whether the situation is applicable to their specific context. They probably do not want excessive references. They will want to know briefly what you did and how, but will value more the prescriptive (and proscriptive) recommendations that you have the confidence to make. This implies a writing style focused on action for the practitioner reader who faces these real-world problems or challenges. However, do not mistake the call for brevity for abandoning a logical chain of reasoning from observation to recommendations. Indeed, practitioners will want to assess the believability of recommendations especially if these have substantial, even existential implications for their organisations. It may be that this shorter version of the research output should parallel a longer version. Use concise tables and informative figures to condense verbose text in the body of a paper. Ancillary materials could be consigned to an online appendix. Communications of the ACM, some years ago, specified a tight word length (4000), a short list of references (max 10) and tables/figures (max 4 each). That may be too restrictive for our tastes, but even if we increase the numbers by 50% the result will still be consumable.</p><p>In this second issue of volume 34, we present eight articles.</p><p>In the first article, van Offenbeek et al. (<span>2024</span>) note that when there are misfits between information systems and people's work practices, workarounds often emerge in response. In complex work environments, working around information systems is regularly required to get tasks done. Many workarounds are functional and may become legitimate practices. However, in the current study, the authors show how some workarounds can, in turn, lead to new or increased misfits for subsequent users. The authors report on a multi-year, in-depth, qualitative exploration of the use of an electronic health record system in two tertiary hospitals. The authors report how escalating patterns of misfits and workarounds emerge through the interplay among work practice routineness, misfit characteristics and non-compliant workaround behaviours. By differentiating the concept of non-compliance, the authors arrive at a conceptual distinction between, on the one hand, three misfit-aggravating workaround patterns and, on the other hand, those that leave the misfit unaffected or even reduce it.</p><p>In the second article, Gong et al. (<span>2024</span>) suggest that social factors play a critical role in motivating player participation and commitment to online multiplayer games. Many popular mobile massively multiplayer online games (MMOGs) adopt social network embeddedness (SNE) functions to optimise players' social play experience. SNE changes the traditional pattern of MMOG social play by porting acquaintance relationships (e.g., Facebook friends) from social networking sites to the virtual game world. Drawing on the affordance framework and social capital literature, the authors propose a theoretical model that integrates the factors of SNE technology affordance (identity transparency and information transparency), players' social experience (social interaction, social support, shared vision and social pressure) and affordance effects (play performance and play frequency). The model was validated through a longitudinal field study, in which both subjective and objective data were collected. The study enhances the theoretical understanding of social relationships in players' game participation results from the SNE aspect.</p><p>In the third article, Müller and Sæbø (<span>2024</span>) describe how the <i>Scandinavian Journal of Information Systems</i> was hijacked by cybercriminals who created a fraudulent website to scam authors. The criminals sent fake acceptance letters and charged authors for publication, while the website appeared legitimate and was linked to Scopus, Elsevier's well-known citation database. The Editor-in-Chief discovered the scam after an author reported receiving both an acceptance letter and a desk rejection for her manuscript. The investigation revealed that several authors had been scammed, and the fraudulent website appeared in online searches. Despite reporting the crime to various authorities, the fraudulent site remains operational, highlighting the difficulties in stopping such cybercrimes. The authors discuss implications for the IS community and strategies for combating this nascent threat.</p><p>In the fourth article, Laumer et al. (<span>2024</span>) examine the conditions under which applicants in personnel selection processes perceive algorithms to be fair and develop a theoretical foundation for algorithmic fairness perceptions. Drawing on an online application scenario with eight experimental groups (<i>n</i> = 801), the authors analyse the determinants for algorithmic fairness perceptions and the impact of interventions that are based on transparency and anthropomorphism. Embedded in a stimulus-organism-response framework and drawing from organisational justice theory, the authors reveal four justice dimensions (procedural, distributive, interpersonal and informational) that determine algorithmic fairness perceptions. The results further show that transparency and anthropomorphism interventions primarily mainly affect dimensions of interpersonal and informational justice and highlight the importance of algorithmic fairness perceptions as critical determinants for individual choices.</p><p>In the fifth article, Durani et al. (<span>2024</span>) recount how historically, gatekeepers, like elites and institutions, controlled visual information to serve their agendas. However, the rise of social media has given rise to ‘visual audience gatekeeping’, where users shape information flow. This evolution offers empowerment but is not without risks, as visual content's persuasive nature can be exploited for persuasion and manipulation. The authors scrutinise visual audience gatekeeping in the context of the Russo-Ukrainian War, focusing on a Russia-related Reddit subforum. As audience gatekeepers, users disseminate visual content that aligns with their embraced social reality. The outcome is a ‘visual echo chamber’ characterised by limited information diversity, thereby corroborating but seldom interrogating the worldviews of audience gatekeepers. Amid heightened tension, this cycle intensifies, increasing the potential for radical visual narratives to gain ground. The study culminates in a novel theoretical model of visual audience gatekeeping, offering broad implications for the fields of visual communication, gatekeeping theory and social media platforms.</p><p>In the sixth article, Hardin et al. (<span>2024</span>) use a theory-driven, deductive approach to examine the concept of virtual team efficacy. The authors draw on social cognitive theory and trust theory to develop a research model in which virtual team efficacy relates indirectly to virtual team outcomes through trust and perceptions of problems with time differences, geographical separation and cultural differences. Findings from a multi-wave survey administered during a comprehensive virtual team project confirm the research model hypotheses. The authors conclude by emphasising the importance of expanding the virtual team efficacy nomological network because, unlike collective efficacy concepts developed for traditional team settings, virtual team efficacy focuses on the technological components characteristic of virtual team projects.</p><p>In the seventh article, Lumbard et al. (<span>2024</span>) examine how open-source software continues to play a critical part of our shared digital infrastructure. The authors explore how open-source software is understood to meet acceptable standards of health and sustainability as it is relied on as a key component of organisational work. Open-source community research has explored issues of health and sustainability, often focusing on the characteristics of single open-source projects. Using social comparison as a research frame, the authors explore how open-source project health and sustainability are understood, not in isolation, but across communities within software ecosystems. The authors provide insights for how people explore and compare interactions present across open-source communities, demonstrating open-source community health, not a set of discrete metrics, but is an ongoing social construction.</p><p>In the eighth article, Aguirre-Urreta et al. (<span>2024</span>) engage with the debate on formative modelling (‘formative measurement’) in the information systems discipline and in particular the claim that measurement model misspecification, where a reflective model is used instead of a more appropriate formative model, is widespread. The authors argue that this misspecification cannot be true because models mis-specified in this way would fail the measurement validation procedures used with reflective models and thus would not be publishable. The authors present two extensive simulation studies to support their contention. The simulation results show that in most cases where data originate from a formative model, estimating a reflective model would not produce results that satisfy the commonly used measurement validation guidelines. Based on these results, they conclude that widespread publication of models where the direction of measurement is mis-specified is unlikely in IS and other disciplines that use similar measurement validation guidelines. Building on recent discussions on modelling endogenous formatively specified latent variables, they also demonstrate that the effects of misspecification are minor in models that do pass the model quality check. Their results address important issues in the literature on the consequences of measurement model misspecification and provide a starting point for new advances in this area.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":48049,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Information Systems Journal\",\"volume\":null,\"pages\":null},\"PeriodicalIF\":6.5000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-11-30\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/isj.12492\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Information Systems Journal\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"91\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/isj.12492\",\"RegionNum\":2,\"RegionCategory\":\"管理学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q1\",\"JCRName\":\"INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Information Systems Journal","FirstCategoryId":"91","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/isj.12492","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"管理学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

摘要

另一个原因是,审稿人几乎总是会提出一些修改和补充建议,这些建议需要在稿件被接受之前进行。如果稿件已经很长,增加文字意味着可能要删除其他内容,这可能会产生新的问题,让人感觉缺乏进展。随着我们进入生成式人工智能时代,有可能会出现更多的稿件,这些稿件写得很好,语法也很正确,但却淹没在自己的冗长文字中,构成了不必要填充的明显例证。我们中的许多人都经历过这种情况的另一面,即学生借助人工智能工具对论文进行总结。虽然这增加了一些价值,但也凸显了论文过于冗长的弊端:许多读者的最初反应是不愿阅读。最后,我们注意到,现在越来越难找到愿意审阅12000至20000字怪物投稿的人!潜在的审稿人在收到邀请后会说:"是的,我喜欢这个主题,我知道这个方法,所以原则上我愿意审稿,但是......稿子有多长?'当真相大白后,他们发现自己要付出马拉松式的阅读和消化努力,继续审稿的意愿就会明显减弱。也有少数人坚持了下来,但为了得到两份好评,我们可能要邀请 15-20 人,这就不可避免地拖延了整个审稿过程。也许从 6000 字的较短投稿开始,再往上修改到 8000 字会更好,而不是从 12 个字开始往 20 个字进军。俳句或呼吁简洁,都是过犹不及的比喻,但我们应该思考如何将我们的思想集中在真正重要的事情上,并将我们的研究提炼为可消费的部分。也许我们可以借鉴《自然》或《柳叶刀》等期刊的做法,它们涉及复杂的概念和拯救生命的研究,同时将字数控制在 5000 字以内。我们严重怀疑作为读者的从业人员是否有时间、精力和耐心阅读过长的文章。在《国际期刊》上,我们要求从业人员论文的字数不超过 8000 字(包括所有内容)。6 我们还制定了详细的指南,并在最近的一篇社论(Davison et al.从业人员论文应反映正式商业交流中常用的体裁:简明扼要的商业报告和备忘录。摘要应作为执行摘要阅读,侧重于问题的现实背景和关键建议。哈佛商业评论》要求作者提交 800 字的叙述,这并不奇怪。实践者更看重的是简短精炼的文章,省去不必要的文献、方法和分析,尽管这些材料可以保留在附录中。实践者看重的是你在做什么以及为什么:动机、问题和问题。他们需要一些背景资料,但不要过多,只需帮助他们确保情况是否适用于他们的具体情况。他们可能不需要过多的参考资料。他们希望简要了解你做了什么以及如何做的,但更看重的是你有信心提出的规范性(和指令性)建议。这就意味着,对于面临这些现实问题或挑战的实践读者来说,写作风格应侧重于行动。但是,不要误以为要求简洁就意味着放弃了从观察到建议的逻辑推理链。事实上,实践者会希望评估建议的可信度,尤其是当这些建议对他们的组织有实质性甚至是生存性影响时。这种较短版本的研究成果可能与较长的版本并行不悖。使用简洁的表格和翔实的图表来压缩论文正文中的冗长文字。辅助材料可放在在线附录中。几年前,《ACM 通信》规定了严格的字数长度(4000 字)、简短的参考文献列表(最多 10 篇)和表格/图(最多各 4 个)。在第一篇文章中,van Offenbeek 等人(2024 年)指出,当信息系统与人们的工作实践不匹配时,往往会出现变通办法。在复杂的工作环境中,经常需要绕开信息系统来完成任务。许多变通办法是实用的,并可能成为合法的做法。然而,在当前的研究中,作者展示了一些变通方法如何反过来导致后来的用户产生新的或更多的不适应。 作者报告了对两家三级医院使用电子健康记录系统的多年深入定性研究。作者报告了如何通过工作实践的常规性、不适应特征和不合规变通行为之间的相互作用,形成不断升级的不适应和变通模式。在第二篇文章中,Gong 等人(2024 年)提出,社会因素在激励玩家参与和投入在线多人游戏方面起着至关重要的作用。许多流行的移动大型多人在线游戏(MMOG)采用社交网络嵌入(SNE)功能来优化玩家的社交游戏体验。SNE 通过将熟人关系(如 Facebook 好友)从社交网站移植到虚拟游戏世界,改变了传统的网络游戏社交游戏模式。作者借鉴承受能力框架和社会资本文献,提出了一个理论模型,该模型综合了 SNE 技术承受能力(身份透明和信息透明)、玩家社会体验(社会互动、社会支持、共同愿景和社会压力)和承受能力效应(游戏表现和游戏频率)等因素。该模型通过一项纵向实地研究进行了验证,研究中收集了主观和客观数据。在第三篇文章中,Müller 和 Sæbø(2024 年)描述了《斯堪的纳维亚信息系统杂志》如何被网络犯罪分子劫持,这些犯罪分子创建了一个欺诈性网站来诈骗作者。犯罪分子发送虚假的录用信,并向作者收取发表费,而网站看起来是合法的,并与爱思唯尔著名的引文数据库 Scopus 相链接。在一位作者报告说同时收到了录用信和退稿通知后,主编发现了这个骗局。调查显示,有多位作者被骗,而该欺诈网站也出现在网上搜索中。尽管已向多个部门报案,但欺诈网站仍在运行,这凸显了阻止此类网络犯罪的难度。在第四篇文章中,Laumer 等人(2024 年)研究了人事选拔过程中申请人认为算法公平的条件,并为算法公平感建立了理论基础。作者借鉴了有八个实验组(n = 801)的在线申请场景,分析了算法公平感的决定因素以及基于透明度和拟人化的干预措施的影响。作者在 "刺激--组织--反应 "框架内,借鉴组织公正理论,揭示了决定算法公平感的四个公正维度(程序、分配、人际和信息)。结果进一步表明,透明度和拟人化干预主要影响人际公正和信息公正的维度,并强调了算法公平感作为个人选择的关键决定因素的重要性。在第五篇文章中,Durani 等人(2024 年)讲述了历史上守门人(如精英和机构)是如何控制视觉信息以服务于他们的议程的。然而,社交媒体的兴起催生了 "视觉受众把关",即用户决定信息流。这种演变赋予了人们权力,但也并非没有风险,因为视觉内容的说服力可能会被利用来进行说服和操纵。作者以俄乌战争为背景,以与俄罗斯相关的 Reddit 子论坛为重点,对视觉受众把关进行了研究。作为受众把关人,用户传播与其所接受的社会现实相一致的视觉内容。其结果是形成了一个 "视觉回音室",其特点是信息多样性有限,从而证实但很少质疑受众把关人的世界观。在紧张局势加剧的情况下,这种循环愈演愈烈,增加了激进视觉叙事站稳脚跟的可能性。这项研究最终提出了一个新颖的视觉受众把关理论模型,为视觉传播、把关理论和社交媒体平台等领域提供了广泛的启示。在第六篇文章中,Hardin 等人(2024 年)采用理论驱动的演绎法研究了虚拟团队效能的概念。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The virtue of brevity

Before the rise of online-only publishing, journals, including the ISJ, operated with page budgets, which determined the annual limit of pages that could be published. A decade ago, at the ISJ, this amounted to some 576 journal pages. However, with the advent of online-only publishing, the concept of a page budget has disappeared. The total number of pages increased gradually, at first to 666, to 800 and then it jumped to over 1000. Wiley, the publisher of the ISJ, has informed us that there is no limit at all to how many pages (or articles) we can publish a year, so long as quality standards are maintained. In 2023, the ISJ published 43 research articles, 8 editorials and 3 book reviews, a total of 1458 journal pages or 253% of the pre-online-only model. We expect that in future these numbers will continue to rise.

Not only has the number of accepted articles increased but also has their length. It used to be the case that we requested authors to keep within 8000 words. This was supposed to be an all-inclusive word count from title to references and appendices. With the passing of time, the restrictions of paper length have largely disappeared. Table 1 below presents the guidance given to authors for the AIS Senior Scholars' List of Premier Journals as well as several others. While there is some wiggle room, the general guidance tends to sit within the 8000- to 12 000-word range, or 38–55 pages. This is similar to adjacent fields: the Academy of Management Journal allows 40 double-spaced pages including references, tables, figures and appendices,1 and Organisation Studies permits up to 13 000 words encompassing references, tables, figures and appendices.2 Computer Science journals tend to publish briefer papers. For instance, IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence allows 35 double spaced pages3 and IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials charges authors $220 for per page over 30 pages (up to 8 pages).4

Today it is not unusual for a first-round submission to be in the 12 000-word range and for a finally accepted article to be 15 000. Even 20 000-word epics are by no means unheard of. Why all this verbosity? One reason is that authors and reviewers get trapped in what we call a text-accumulation trap. Authors submit papers with as much information as possible, hoping to instil confidence in the review team as to its completeness, as well as to prepare for both expected and unexpected reviewer demands. Reviewers then read the paper, yet ask for even more detail, and authors feel obliged to respond in kind. Over multiple revision cycles, satisfying all the reviewers requires ever more words. Reviewers should be mindful of the text-accumulation trap. When requesting authors to incorporate large amounts of new material, it is necessary to weigh the value of this extra material against the risk of unnecessarily bloating the manuscript.

In addition, it is easier to write more than less, easier to include more literature, more cross-references, more examples, more arguments and more details. In contrast, it is harder to be parsimonious with words, even if our theories are often lauded for their parsimony. Blaise Pascal noted in the 17th century ‘I would have written a shorter letter, but I did not have the time’.5 It takes much careful thought to reduce the length of a manuscript, yet to preserve the essential message.

Editors used to say things like ‘your article is accepted but … I need you to cut at least 3,000 words’. However, with the page-budget restrictions of print journals largely gone, editors are less inclined to make such demands. We have not seen such a request in many years and our less experienced readers may be shocked to read this historical anecdote! With the disappearance of this means of reducing manuscript length, the previously balanced system is now out of balance. As a result, submitted manuscripts get ever longer, ever more turgid and, regrettably, ever less enjoyable to read.

In this editorial, we argue for brevity rather than verbosity. First, it is instructive to draw analogies with the short story, as opposed to the epic novel. Boyd (2005, p. 238) writes that ‘there are twenty-page short stories that are far more charged and gravid with meaning than 400-page novels’. Is the same true for work in our own field? Would our work be more impactful, more read, more appreciated if it was shorter, crisper and more precise and if we took the time and trouble to alembicate our insights before submitting them for review? For authors, there are several reasons to submit a shorter, more concise manuscript.

One is that the main ideas will stand out more clearly, not be hidden among text that becomes noise precluding the reader from getting to the main message. No manuscript will attract support from reviewers if its contributions are invisible.

Another reason is that reviewers almost invariably suggest modifications and additions that need to be undertaken before the manuscript can be accepted. If the manuscript is already long, adding text means that something else may have to be deleted which can create new issues and the feeling of a lack of progress.

As we enter the era of generative AI, there is the potential for a rise in the number of submissions that are well written and grammatically correct but that drown in their own verbosity, constituting clear exemplification of unnecessary padding. The flip side of this, as many of us have experienced, involves students resorting to AI tools to summarise a paper. Although this adds some value, it also highlights the downside of papers that are overly verbose: the initial response from many readers is a reluctance to read it.

Finally, we observe that it is increasingly difficult to find people who are willing to review 12,000- to 20,000-word monster submissions! Potential reviewers reply to invitations, saying ‘yes, I like the topic and I know the method, so I am willing in principle to review it, but … how long is the manuscript?’. When the truth is revealed and they see that they are in for a marathon read-and-digest effort, their willingness to continue wilts noticeably. A few do stay the course, but to get two good reviews, we may have to invite 15–20 people, which unavoidably delays the whole review process. It might be better to start off with a shorter submission of 6000 words and to revise it upwards towards 8000, rather than starting with 12 and heading for 20.

Beyond the rather tedious exposition of numbers, there are arguments for the value of brevity itself. A haiku, or a call for laconicism, takes the analogy too far, but we should be contemplating how we can focus our thoughts on what really matters and distilling our research into consumable portions. Maybe we can take a cue from journals like Nature or The Lancet that deal with complex concepts and life-saving studies, while keeping word counts under 5000.

A genre where this is particularly apparent is the practitioner paper. We seriously doubt if practitioners, as readers, have the time, energy and patience to wade through excessively long articles. At the ISJ, we ask that practitioner papers not exceed 8000 words, inclusive of all contents.6 We also have detailed guidelines and address the topic of practitioner papers in a recent editorial (Davison et al., 2023). Practitioner papers should mirror genres commonly used in formal business communication: concise and to the point business reports and memos. Abstracts should read as executive summaries, focusing on the real-world context of problems and key recommendations. It is no surprise that the Harvard Business Review asks authors to submit an 800-word narrative. Practitioners are more likely to value shorter, more pithy work that dispenses with unnecessary literature, method and analysis, though this material could be retained in an appendix. Practitioners value what you are doing and why: the motivation, problematisation and question. They will want some background, but not in excess, and only to help them ensure whether the situation is applicable to their specific context. They probably do not want excessive references. They will want to know briefly what you did and how, but will value more the prescriptive (and proscriptive) recommendations that you have the confidence to make. This implies a writing style focused on action for the practitioner reader who faces these real-world problems or challenges. However, do not mistake the call for brevity for abandoning a logical chain of reasoning from observation to recommendations. Indeed, practitioners will want to assess the believability of recommendations especially if these have substantial, even existential implications for their organisations. It may be that this shorter version of the research output should parallel a longer version. Use concise tables and informative figures to condense verbose text in the body of a paper. Ancillary materials could be consigned to an online appendix. Communications of the ACM, some years ago, specified a tight word length (4000), a short list of references (max 10) and tables/figures (max 4 each). That may be too restrictive for our tastes, but even if we increase the numbers by 50% the result will still be consumable.

In this second issue of volume 34, we present eight articles.

In the first article, van Offenbeek et al. (2024) note that when there are misfits between information systems and people's work practices, workarounds often emerge in response. In complex work environments, working around information systems is regularly required to get tasks done. Many workarounds are functional and may become legitimate practices. However, in the current study, the authors show how some workarounds can, in turn, lead to new or increased misfits for subsequent users. The authors report on a multi-year, in-depth, qualitative exploration of the use of an electronic health record system in two tertiary hospitals. The authors report how escalating patterns of misfits and workarounds emerge through the interplay among work practice routineness, misfit characteristics and non-compliant workaround behaviours. By differentiating the concept of non-compliance, the authors arrive at a conceptual distinction between, on the one hand, three misfit-aggravating workaround patterns and, on the other hand, those that leave the misfit unaffected or even reduce it.

In the second article, Gong et al. (2024) suggest that social factors play a critical role in motivating player participation and commitment to online multiplayer games. Many popular mobile massively multiplayer online games (MMOGs) adopt social network embeddedness (SNE) functions to optimise players' social play experience. SNE changes the traditional pattern of MMOG social play by porting acquaintance relationships (e.g., Facebook friends) from social networking sites to the virtual game world. Drawing on the affordance framework and social capital literature, the authors propose a theoretical model that integrates the factors of SNE technology affordance (identity transparency and information transparency), players' social experience (social interaction, social support, shared vision and social pressure) and affordance effects (play performance and play frequency). The model was validated through a longitudinal field study, in which both subjective and objective data were collected. The study enhances the theoretical understanding of social relationships in players' game participation results from the SNE aspect.

In the third article, Müller and Sæbø (2024) describe how the Scandinavian Journal of Information Systems was hijacked by cybercriminals who created a fraudulent website to scam authors. The criminals sent fake acceptance letters and charged authors for publication, while the website appeared legitimate and was linked to Scopus, Elsevier's well-known citation database. The Editor-in-Chief discovered the scam after an author reported receiving both an acceptance letter and a desk rejection for her manuscript. The investigation revealed that several authors had been scammed, and the fraudulent website appeared in online searches. Despite reporting the crime to various authorities, the fraudulent site remains operational, highlighting the difficulties in stopping such cybercrimes. The authors discuss implications for the IS community and strategies for combating this nascent threat.

In the fourth article, Laumer et al. (2024) examine the conditions under which applicants in personnel selection processes perceive algorithms to be fair and develop a theoretical foundation for algorithmic fairness perceptions. Drawing on an online application scenario with eight experimental groups (n = 801), the authors analyse the determinants for algorithmic fairness perceptions and the impact of interventions that are based on transparency and anthropomorphism. Embedded in a stimulus-organism-response framework and drawing from organisational justice theory, the authors reveal four justice dimensions (procedural, distributive, interpersonal and informational) that determine algorithmic fairness perceptions. The results further show that transparency and anthropomorphism interventions primarily mainly affect dimensions of interpersonal and informational justice and highlight the importance of algorithmic fairness perceptions as critical determinants for individual choices.

In the fifth article, Durani et al. (2024) recount how historically, gatekeepers, like elites and institutions, controlled visual information to serve their agendas. However, the rise of social media has given rise to ‘visual audience gatekeeping’, where users shape information flow. This evolution offers empowerment but is not without risks, as visual content's persuasive nature can be exploited for persuasion and manipulation. The authors scrutinise visual audience gatekeeping in the context of the Russo-Ukrainian War, focusing on a Russia-related Reddit subforum. As audience gatekeepers, users disseminate visual content that aligns with their embraced social reality. The outcome is a ‘visual echo chamber’ characterised by limited information diversity, thereby corroborating but seldom interrogating the worldviews of audience gatekeepers. Amid heightened tension, this cycle intensifies, increasing the potential for radical visual narratives to gain ground. The study culminates in a novel theoretical model of visual audience gatekeeping, offering broad implications for the fields of visual communication, gatekeeping theory and social media platforms.

In the sixth article, Hardin et al. (2024) use a theory-driven, deductive approach to examine the concept of virtual team efficacy. The authors draw on social cognitive theory and trust theory to develop a research model in which virtual team efficacy relates indirectly to virtual team outcomes through trust and perceptions of problems with time differences, geographical separation and cultural differences. Findings from a multi-wave survey administered during a comprehensive virtual team project confirm the research model hypotheses. The authors conclude by emphasising the importance of expanding the virtual team efficacy nomological network because, unlike collective efficacy concepts developed for traditional team settings, virtual team efficacy focuses on the technological components characteristic of virtual team projects.

In the seventh article, Lumbard et al. (2024) examine how open-source software continues to play a critical part of our shared digital infrastructure. The authors explore how open-source software is understood to meet acceptable standards of health and sustainability as it is relied on as a key component of organisational work. Open-source community research has explored issues of health and sustainability, often focusing on the characteristics of single open-source projects. Using social comparison as a research frame, the authors explore how open-source project health and sustainability are understood, not in isolation, but across communities within software ecosystems. The authors provide insights for how people explore and compare interactions present across open-source communities, demonstrating open-source community health, not a set of discrete metrics, but is an ongoing social construction.

In the eighth article, Aguirre-Urreta et al. (2024) engage with the debate on formative modelling (‘formative measurement’) in the information systems discipline and in particular the claim that measurement model misspecification, where a reflective model is used instead of a more appropriate formative model, is widespread. The authors argue that this misspecification cannot be true because models mis-specified in this way would fail the measurement validation procedures used with reflective models and thus would not be publishable. The authors present two extensive simulation studies to support their contention. The simulation results show that in most cases where data originate from a formative model, estimating a reflective model would not produce results that satisfy the commonly used measurement validation guidelines. Based on these results, they conclude that widespread publication of models where the direction of measurement is mis-specified is unlikely in IS and other disciplines that use similar measurement validation guidelines. Building on recent discussions on modelling endogenous formatively specified latent variables, they also demonstrate that the effects of misspecification are minor in models that do pass the model quality check. Their results address important issues in the literature on the consequences of measurement model misspecification and provide a starting point for new advances in this area.

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来源期刊
Information Systems Journal
Information Systems Journal INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE-
CiteScore
14.60
自引率
7.80%
发文量
44
期刊介绍: The Information Systems Journal (ISJ) is an international journal promoting the study of, and interest in, information systems. Articles are welcome on research, practice, experience, current issues and debates. The ISJ encourages submissions that reflect the wide and interdisciplinary nature of the subject and articles that integrate technological disciplines with social, contextual and management issues, based on research using appropriate research methods.The ISJ has particularly built its reputation by publishing qualitative research and it continues to welcome such papers. Quantitative research papers are also welcome but they need to emphasise the context of the research and the theoretical and practical implications of their findings.The ISJ does not publish purely technical papers.
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