{"title":"From the Editor","authors":"J. Sipior","doi":"10.1080/10580530.2023.2218157","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"I am pleased to introduce the third issue of Volume 40. Five articles are included in this issue. A conceptual framework for artificial intelligence (AI) governance is proposed in the first article, entitled “Artificial Intelligence Governance For Businesses,” by Johannes Schneider, Rene Abraham, Christian Meske, and Jan vom Brocke. Based upon AI and machine learning literature, this framework classifies governance according to the governance of data, machine learning models, and AI systems along the dimensions of who is governed, what is governed, and how it is governed. The second article, entitled “Investigating the Mediating Effect of Business-IT Alignment between Management of IT Investment and Firm Performance,” by Ilmudeen Aboobucker, Yukun Bao, and Peilin Zhang, investigates how business-IT alignment mediates the management of IT investment and firm performance. The results reveal that business-IT alignment has a partial mediating role in the management of IT investment and firm performance. In the third article, authors Jennifer Jewer, Búi K. Peterson, Raymond G. Gosine, and Peter J. Warrian explore the impact of the institutional environment on the decision to outsource digital innovation in the article entitled “Boundaries and Boundary Spanning in Digital Innovation Outsourcing: The Influence of Institutional Logics and Governance Systems.” The findings show that different types of governance systems can enable or constrain boundary spanning mechanisms that influence the ability of organizations to address their divergent logics and influence the propensity to outsource digital innovation. In the fourth article, entitled “System and Information Qualities in Mobile Fitness Apps and their Effects on User Behavior and Performance,” authors Mobark Q. Aldossari, Quynh N. Nguyen, Anh Ta, and Steven A. Schulz propose and test a model that examines factors that influence the use of goal setting and goal tracking in mobile fitness apps and the impact on user behavior change. The results confirm the importance of system quality and information quality on goal tracking and goal setting use of mobile fitness apps. Finally, the last article in this issue, “Work-to-Home Cybersecurity Spillover: Construct Development and Validation,” authored by Lakshmi Goel, Justin Zuopeng Zhang, and Steven Williamson, investigates workers’ cybersecurity behavior transferred from their workspace to their homes through teleworking and using cloud-based services to remotely access and process their work-related files. Cybersecurity behavior is empirically formalized and confirmed as a new construct referred to as Practice-based Work-toHome Cybersecurity Spillover. Submission details are presented on the ISM website: http://www.tandfonline.com/uism Submissions are welcome through ScholarOne’s Manuscript Central for ISM at: http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/uism Please consider the Information Systems Management journal for publication of your best research. Also, I invite you to consider guest editing a special issue. Finally, I would like to thank our devoted readership, the Senior Editors for their expertise in overseeing submissions, the authors for undertaking quality research, and the many reviewers for conscientiously providing valuable feedback to authors. Happy reading!","PeriodicalId":56289,"journal":{"name":"Information Systems Management","volume":"40 1","pages":"207 - 207"},"PeriodicalIF":3.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-06-19","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Information Systems Management","FirstCategoryId":"94","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/10580530.2023.2218157","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"管理学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"COMPUTER SCIENCE, INFORMATION SYSTEMS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
I am pleased to introduce the third issue of Volume 40. Five articles are included in this issue. A conceptual framework for artificial intelligence (AI) governance is proposed in the first article, entitled “Artificial Intelligence Governance For Businesses,” by Johannes Schneider, Rene Abraham, Christian Meske, and Jan vom Brocke. Based upon AI and machine learning literature, this framework classifies governance according to the governance of data, machine learning models, and AI systems along the dimensions of who is governed, what is governed, and how it is governed. The second article, entitled “Investigating the Mediating Effect of Business-IT Alignment between Management of IT Investment and Firm Performance,” by Ilmudeen Aboobucker, Yukun Bao, and Peilin Zhang, investigates how business-IT alignment mediates the management of IT investment and firm performance. The results reveal that business-IT alignment has a partial mediating role in the management of IT investment and firm performance. In the third article, authors Jennifer Jewer, Búi K. Peterson, Raymond G. Gosine, and Peter J. Warrian explore the impact of the institutional environment on the decision to outsource digital innovation in the article entitled “Boundaries and Boundary Spanning in Digital Innovation Outsourcing: The Influence of Institutional Logics and Governance Systems.” The findings show that different types of governance systems can enable or constrain boundary spanning mechanisms that influence the ability of organizations to address their divergent logics and influence the propensity to outsource digital innovation. In the fourth article, entitled “System and Information Qualities in Mobile Fitness Apps and their Effects on User Behavior and Performance,” authors Mobark Q. Aldossari, Quynh N. Nguyen, Anh Ta, and Steven A. Schulz propose and test a model that examines factors that influence the use of goal setting and goal tracking in mobile fitness apps and the impact on user behavior change. The results confirm the importance of system quality and information quality on goal tracking and goal setting use of mobile fitness apps. Finally, the last article in this issue, “Work-to-Home Cybersecurity Spillover: Construct Development and Validation,” authored by Lakshmi Goel, Justin Zuopeng Zhang, and Steven Williamson, investigates workers’ cybersecurity behavior transferred from their workspace to their homes through teleworking and using cloud-based services to remotely access and process their work-related files. Cybersecurity behavior is empirically formalized and confirmed as a new construct referred to as Practice-based Work-toHome Cybersecurity Spillover. Submission details are presented on the ISM website: http://www.tandfonline.com/uism Submissions are welcome through ScholarOne’s Manuscript Central for ISM at: http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/uism Please consider the Information Systems Management journal for publication of your best research. Also, I invite you to consider guest editing a special issue. Finally, I would like to thank our devoted readership, the Senior Editors for their expertise in overseeing submissions, the authors for undertaking quality research, and the many reviewers for conscientiously providing valuable feedback to authors. Happy reading!
期刊介绍:
Information Systems Management (ISM) is the on-going exchange of academic research, best practices, and insights based on managerial experience. The journal’s goal is to advance the practice of information systems management through this exchange.
To meet this goal, ISM features themed papers examining a particular topic. In addition to themed papers, the journal regularly publishes on the following topics in IS management.
Achieving Strategic IT Alignment and Capabilities
IT Governance
CIO and IT Leadership Roles
IT Sourcing
Planning and Managing an Enterprise Infrastructure
IT Security
Selecting and Delivering Application Solutions
Portfolio Management
Managing Complex IT Projects
E-Business Technologies
Supporting Knowledge Work
The target readership includes both academics and practitioners. Hence, submissions integrating research and practice, and providing implications for both, are encouraged.