CAPTURING BOTTOM-UP INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY USE PROCESSES: A COMPLEX ADAPTIVE SYSTEMS MODEL
成果类型:
Review
署名作者:
Nan, Ning
署名单位:
University of Oklahoma System; University of Oklahoma - Norman
刊物名称:
MIS QUARTERLY
ISSN/ISSBN:
0276-7783
发表日期:
2011
页码:
505-532
关键词:
ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATION
organizational-change
decision-making
acceptance
CONCEPTUALIZATION
infrastructure
exploitation
exploration
PERSPECTIVE
integration
摘要:
Although information systems researchers have long recognized the possibility for collective-level information technology use patterns and outcomes to emerge from individual-level IT use behaviors, few have explored the key properties and mechanisms involved in this bottom-up IT use process. This paper seeks to build a theoretical framework drawing on the concepts and the analytical tool of complex adaptive systems (CAS) theory. The paper presents a CAS model of IT use that encodes a bottom-up IT use process into three interrelated elements: agents that consist of the basic entities of actions in an IT use process, interactions that refer to the mutually adaptive behaviors of agents, and an environment that represents the social organizational contexts of IT use. Agent-based modeling is introduced as the analytical tool for computationally representing and examining the CAS model of IT use. The operationability of the CAS model and the analytical tool are demonstrated through a theory-building exercise translating an interpretive case study of IT use to a specific version of the CAS model. While Orlikowski (1996) raised questions regarding the impacts of employee learning, IT flexibility, and workplace rigidity on IT-based organization transformation, the CAS model indicates that these factors in individual-level actions do not have a direct causal linkage with organizational-level IT use patterns and outcomes. This theory-building exercise manifests the intriguing nature of the bottom-up IT use process: collective-level IT use patterns and outcomes are the logical and yet often unintended or unforeseeable consequences of individual-level behaviors. The CAS model of IT use offers opportunities for expanding the theoretical and methodological scope of the IT use literature.