测验、新词、挑衅和世俗:标题和解释

IF 6.5 2区 管理学 Q1 INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE Information Systems Journal Pub Date : 2023-08-06 DOI:10.1111/isj.12464
Robert M. Davison
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Why the authors thought that the article might be suitable for the ISJ is another matter, but the title alone has a certain unique quality that might seduce or repel you. Thus, just as the creation of a title is a subjective process, so too is the interpretation of a title. But there are some aspects of a title that are worth examining a little more carefully. For instance, we can look at length, depth, comprehensibility, suitability and so forth. In the paragraphs below, I offer some recent ISJ titles and my own analysis. My purpose is to alert readers to the potential for value in a title, and to gently suggest that the creation of a title is itself an art that is worth examining and practicing carefully.</p><p>At one extreme, I have seen titles that are almost as long as the abstract. These often tend to mundane description rather than creative quirkiness. The longer titles often have two parts, separated by a dash or colon. It seems that the authors want to cram into the title as many parts of the study as possible, including in some cases a list of all the moderating and mediating variables. This is probably effective both in conveying the substance of a paper to potential readers, and in lengthening one's cv by a line or two. But is it really necessary? Could one devise a more frugal title that is nevertheless attractive to potential readers? The longest I can see at the ISJ in recent years is Kranz et al. (<span>2016</span>) ‘Understanding the influence of absorptive capacity and ambidexterity on the process of business model change: The case of on-premise and cloud computing software’. It is quite comprehensive and certainly provides very clear information to the reader on what to expect in the article. In contrast, the shortest title at the ISJ (excluding editorials) is Clarke's (<span>2016</span>) ‘Big Data, Big Risks’. Not only is this short and pithy, but it is also quite provocative and controversial. It may be disliked by those who are enamoured of big data for instance. It seems to embed the personal stance of the researcher. As a title, I think it is quite attractive and it certainly conveys the essence of the article itself.</p><p>Sometimes, a title has a quirky flavour to it that borders on the catachrestical, that is, it uses a turn of phrase or a combination of words that seems somehow out of place. It may invite a new interpretation. For instance, Gerlach et al. (<span>2019</span>) ‘Flamingos on a Slackline: Companies' Challenges of Balancing the Competing Demands of Handling Customer Information and Privacy’. Why Flamingos? It is a puzzle that is only resolved in the very last sentence of the conclusion (Gerlach et al., <span>2019</span>, p. 567), where the authors write: ‘As they are standing on “wobbling slacklines,” companies have to become flamingos and learn to maintain a balanced stance without falling over’. Will the metaphor of the organisation as a flamingo take off? The limited evidence available so far suggests that it has not yet happened: this article is the only one in the entire Wiley Online Library where the word ‘flamingo’ appears in the title. In the AIS eLibrary, the word ‘flamingo’ appears 11 times (counted in late April, 2023) but all of these items either reference this same article or a book published by Flamingo Press.</p><p>Sometimes titles introduce neologisms, for example De Moya and Pallud's (<span>2020</span>) ‘From Panopticon to Heautopticon: A New Form of Surveillance Introduced by Quantified-Self Practices’ or juxtapose words in novel combinations, for example Tamm et al.'s (<span>2022</span>) ‘Creative Analytics: Towards Data-Inspired Creative Decisions’. They may also present a playful counterpoint of ideas, for example Melville et al. (<span>2023</span>) ‘Putting Humans Back in the Loop: An Affordance Conceptualization of the 4th Industrial Revolution’.</p><p>Personally, I think that catachreses, neologisms and other innovative elements of language are generally effective components of a title, so long as they are neither taken to an extreme nor deliberately intended to confuse the reader in the context of the research; as editor I appreciate this kind of novelty. Thus, titles are entities that offer creative potential. As I note above, a title that embodies a metaphor may challenge contemporary knowledge patterns with catachrestical imagination. While reviewers do occasionally take issue with a title, they are often below the bar of critical appraisal and so authors should feel the freedom to be creative when crafting a title: flex your imagination a little, craft a vivacious or quirky turn-of-phrase, shun the mundane and reveal a novel perspective that can attract the attention of your readers.</p><p>I will not belabour the point, but I deliberately craft the titles of editorials in a similar manner: quirkiness attracts! For instance, ‘Appreciating Alien Thinking’, ‘The Art of Vivacious Variance’, ‘The Limitations of Limitations’ and the title of the editorial of the previous issue of this journal, which started off with ‘Pickled Eggs’. Indeed, most editorials have pithy titles that punctuate myths and misconceptions, or that offer a quirky combination of ideas. I hope that this issue's title is no different.</p><p>In this last issue of 2023, we present six articles and two additional editorials.</p><p>In the first article, Weiss et al. (<span>2023</span>) illustrate how BMW, a German manufacturer of high-end cars, designed platform boundary resources to facilitate the development of apps for its onboard infotainment system. Using an action research approach, the authors provide detailed insights into how BMW involved app developers, referred to as lead complementors, in the design process of boundary resources. Over the course of three multi-year episodes, the authors report on the design improvements of boundary resources such as standardised platform interfaces, development tools and platform governance processes. By introducing the notion of lead complementor involvement, the authors transfer the well-known concept of lead users to the context of digital platforms. They offer four propositions that help us to understand and implement lead complementor involvement as an interactive process for improving the design of platform boundary resources.</p><p>In the second article, Yang et al. (<span>2023</span>) explore how weak and strong signals affect venture capital funding acquired by digital startups in various industries in China. Drawing on signalling theory and institutional legitimacy theory, the authors suggest that application downloads function as a novel strong signal that can reduce market legitimacy concerns, and previous-round venture capitalist reputation as a traditional strong signal that mitigates regulatory legitimacy concerns. Further, they articulate the interaction mechanism of these strong and weak signals by demonstrating their complementary or substitutive effects in alleviating information asymmetry on startup quality, which provides implications for digital startups to secure venture capital financing. Theoretically, the authors explicitly examine the simultaneous influence of multiple signals of different strengths on venture capital funding. They also reveal the contextual mechanism of signals in the emerging economy with weak institutional power and high uncertainty.</p><p>In the third article, Tim et al. (<span>2023</span>) advance our understanding of digital resilience, specifically the capacity of individuals to recover from exogenous shocks, through the effective design of IS solutions. The authors present an action design research (ADR) project conducted during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, where they successfully developed a telemonitoring system. This system has been instrumental in supporting over 115 frontline healthcare workers in monitoring the symptoms of more than 1000 patients. Based on the ADR project, the article proposes an ADAPT framework informing effective design of IS solutions for resilience against exogenous shocks. The framework contributes new design process knowledge for a crisis-driven IS design process characterised by urgency, limited resources and diverse stakeholder participation. By offering new insights and practical recommendations, the authors aim to equip design teams with the knowledge required to contribute to crisis-driven design endeavours that tackle the pressing and urgent challenges of our time.</p><p>In the fourth article, Marabelli et al. (<span>2023</span>) explore the challenges and opportunities associated with hybrid conferences. The authors draw on lessons learned from the COVID-19 pandemic, when most conferences worldwide were held first online and then in hybrid mode, and consider the extent to which remote access increased inclusion. The authors argue that academic organisations such as the Association for Information Systems (AIS) should examine ways to continue the practice of allowing remote access to major conferences such as ICIS, AMCIS, ECIS and PACIS. At the same time, the authors acknowledge several issues concerning hybrid conferences, such as: the need for costly technologies and expensive venues, for whoever attends in person; the complexity involved in scheduling sessions that accommodate different time zones; and the possibility that a hybrid conference might lead to first and second class citizens, where the people who attend in person enjoy coffee breaks and social events after paper sessions, while online attendees have to log off. This would achieve a diversity of attendees, with scholars from the Global South being able to access events remotely, but could also lead to segregating online participants, thereby not achieving inclusion. The paper's insights are informed by a survey of several AIS chapters from the Global South and feedback from Senior Scholars and AIS conference organisers.</p><p>In the fifth article, Cram and D'Arcy (<span>2023</span>) explore employee judgements of cybersecurity legitimacy as a new angle for understanding employee compliance with cybersecurity policies. Using a three-wave survey, they find that negative legitimacy judgements mediate the relationship between management support and compliance, as well as between cybersecurity inconvenience and compliance. The results provide support for cybersecurity legitimacy as an important influence on employee compliance with cybersecurity initiatives. This is significant because it highlights to managers the importance of not simply expecting compliant employee behaviour to follow from the introduction of cybersecurity initiatives, but that employees need to be convinced that the initiatives are fair and reasonable.</p><p>The sixth article (Adam et al., <span>2023</span>) is the sole survivor of the first paper development workshop that we organised in June 2021. It is introduced in a separate editorial (Eckhardt, <span>2023</span>) by the organiser and editor of the paper development workshops.</p><p>We complete this issue with a short editorial (Davison et al., <span>2023</span>) in which we explore the genre of practitioner papers, a recently revamped category of submission at the ISJ. We describe what we are looking for in a practitioner paper and explain the criteria that we suggest could be used to evaluate such submissions.</p>","PeriodicalId":48049,"journal":{"name":"Information Systems Journal","volume":"33 6","pages":"1275-1278"},"PeriodicalIF":6.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-08-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/isj.12464","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Quirks, neologisms, provocations and the mundane: Titles and interpretations\",\"authors\":\"Robert M. Davison\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/isj.12464\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>As editor, I get to read a lot of titles, the vast majority of which, alas, we do not end up publishing. In this editorial, I would like to reflect briefly on the nature of titles and their effectiveness in conveying a quick message to a potential reader.</p><p>Throughout the course of my career, I cannot ever recall seeing any advice about how to create a title for a research paper. Titles in general are meaningful and give some clues as to the content of the article that follows. Sometimes we see a title that really catches the eye, that inspires, or even that disgusts, depending on our individual taste. Here is an example of a title of a paper that, regrettably, we did not publish: ‘Rat Swarm Pelican Based Deep Learning And Sequence Mining For Web Page Recommendation’. How do you feel about that? The first three words alone may suffice to turn you on or off. Why the authors thought that the article might be suitable for the ISJ is another matter, but the title alone has a certain unique quality that might seduce or repel you. Thus, just as the creation of a title is a subjective process, so too is the interpretation of a title. But there are some aspects of a title that are worth examining a little more carefully. For instance, we can look at length, depth, comprehensibility, suitability and so forth. In the paragraphs below, I offer some recent ISJ titles and my own analysis. My purpose is to alert readers to the potential for value in a title, and to gently suggest that the creation of a title is itself an art that is worth examining and practicing carefully.</p><p>At one extreme, I have seen titles that are almost as long as the abstract. These often tend to mundane description rather than creative quirkiness. The longer titles often have two parts, separated by a dash or colon. It seems that the authors want to cram into the title as many parts of the study as possible, including in some cases a list of all the moderating and mediating variables. This is probably effective both in conveying the substance of a paper to potential readers, and in lengthening one's cv by a line or two. But is it really necessary? Could one devise a more frugal title that is nevertheless attractive to potential readers? The longest I can see at the ISJ in recent years is Kranz et al. (<span>2016</span>) ‘Understanding the influence of absorptive capacity and ambidexterity on the process of business model change: The case of on-premise and cloud computing software’. It is quite comprehensive and certainly provides very clear information to the reader on what to expect in the article. In contrast, the shortest title at the ISJ (excluding editorials) is Clarke's (<span>2016</span>) ‘Big Data, Big Risks’. Not only is this short and pithy, but it is also quite provocative and controversial. It may be disliked by those who are enamoured of big data for instance. It seems to embed the personal stance of the researcher. As a title, I think it is quite attractive and it certainly conveys the essence of the article itself.</p><p>Sometimes, a title has a quirky flavour to it that borders on the catachrestical, that is, it uses a turn of phrase or a combination of words that seems somehow out of place. It may invite a new interpretation. For instance, Gerlach et al. (<span>2019</span>) ‘Flamingos on a Slackline: Companies' Challenges of Balancing the Competing Demands of Handling Customer Information and Privacy’. Why Flamingos? It is a puzzle that is only resolved in the very last sentence of the conclusion (Gerlach et al., <span>2019</span>, p. 567), where the authors write: ‘As they are standing on “wobbling slacklines,” companies have to become flamingos and learn to maintain a balanced stance without falling over’. Will the metaphor of the organisation as a flamingo take off? The limited evidence available so far suggests that it has not yet happened: this article is the only one in the entire Wiley Online Library where the word ‘flamingo’ appears in the title. In the AIS eLibrary, the word ‘flamingo’ appears 11 times (counted in late April, 2023) but all of these items either reference this same article or a book published by Flamingo Press.</p><p>Sometimes titles introduce neologisms, for example De Moya and Pallud's (<span>2020</span>) ‘From Panopticon to Heautopticon: A New Form of Surveillance Introduced by Quantified-Self Practices’ or juxtapose words in novel combinations, for example Tamm et al.'s (<span>2022</span>) ‘Creative Analytics: Towards Data-Inspired Creative Decisions’. They may also present a playful counterpoint of ideas, for example Melville et al. (<span>2023</span>) ‘Putting Humans Back in the Loop: An Affordance Conceptualization of the 4th Industrial Revolution’.</p><p>Personally, I think that catachreses, neologisms and other innovative elements of language are generally effective components of a title, so long as they are neither taken to an extreme nor deliberately intended to confuse the reader in the context of the research; as editor I appreciate this kind of novelty. Thus, titles are entities that offer creative potential. As I note above, a title that embodies a metaphor may challenge contemporary knowledge patterns with catachrestical imagination. While reviewers do occasionally take issue with a title, they are often below the bar of critical appraisal and so authors should feel the freedom to be creative when crafting a title: flex your imagination a little, craft a vivacious or quirky turn-of-phrase, shun the mundane and reveal a novel perspective that can attract the attention of your readers.</p><p>I will not belabour the point, but I deliberately craft the titles of editorials in a similar manner: quirkiness attracts! For instance, ‘Appreciating Alien Thinking’, ‘The Art of Vivacious Variance’, ‘The Limitations of Limitations’ and the title of the editorial of the previous issue of this journal, which started off with ‘Pickled Eggs’. Indeed, most editorials have pithy titles that punctuate myths and misconceptions, or that offer a quirky combination of ideas. I hope that this issue's title is no different.</p><p>In this last issue of 2023, we present six articles and two additional editorials.</p><p>In the first article, Weiss et al. (<span>2023</span>) illustrate how BMW, a German manufacturer of high-end cars, designed platform boundary resources to facilitate the development of apps for its onboard infotainment system. Using an action research approach, the authors provide detailed insights into how BMW involved app developers, referred to as lead complementors, in the design process of boundary resources. Over the course of three multi-year episodes, the authors report on the design improvements of boundary resources such as standardised platform interfaces, development tools and platform governance processes. By introducing the notion of lead complementor involvement, the authors transfer the well-known concept of lead users to the context of digital platforms. They offer four propositions that help us to understand and implement lead complementor involvement as an interactive process for improving the design of platform boundary resources.</p><p>In the second article, Yang et al. (<span>2023</span>) explore how weak and strong signals affect venture capital funding acquired by digital startups in various industries in China. Drawing on signalling theory and institutional legitimacy theory, the authors suggest that application downloads function as a novel strong signal that can reduce market legitimacy concerns, and previous-round venture capitalist reputation as a traditional strong signal that mitigates regulatory legitimacy concerns. Further, they articulate the interaction mechanism of these strong and weak signals by demonstrating their complementary or substitutive effects in alleviating information asymmetry on startup quality, which provides implications for digital startups to secure venture capital financing. Theoretically, the authors explicitly examine the simultaneous influence of multiple signals of different strengths on venture capital funding. They also reveal the contextual mechanism of signals in the emerging economy with weak institutional power and high uncertainty.</p><p>In the third article, Tim et al. (<span>2023</span>) advance our understanding of digital resilience, specifically the capacity of individuals to recover from exogenous shocks, through the effective design of IS solutions. The authors present an action design research (ADR) project conducted during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, where they successfully developed a telemonitoring system. This system has been instrumental in supporting over 115 frontline healthcare workers in monitoring the symptoms of more than 1000 patients. Based on the ADR project, the article proposes an ADAPT framework informing effective design of IS solutions for resilience against exogenous shocks. The framework contributes new design process knowledge for a crisis-driven IS design process characterised by urgency, limited resources and diverse stakeholder participation. By offering new insights and practical recommendations, the authors aim to equip design teams with the knowledge required to contribute to crisis-driven design endeavours that tackle the pressing and urgent challenges of our time.</p><p>In the fourth article, Marabelli et al. (<span>2023</span>) explore the challenges and opportunities associated with hybrid conferences. The authors draw on lessons learned from the COVID-19 pandemic, when most conferences worldwide were held first online and then in hybrid mode, and consider the extent to which remote access increased inclusion. The authors argue that academic organisations such as the Association for Information Systems (AIS) should examine ways to continue the practice of allowing remote access to major conferences such as ICIS, AMCIS, ECIS and PACIS. At the same time, the authors acknowledge several issues concerning hybrid conferences, such as: the need for costly technologies and expensive venues, for whoever attends in person; the complexity involved in scheduling sessions that accommodate different time zones; and the possibility that a hybrid conference might lead to first and second class citizens, where the people who attend in person enjoy coffee breaks and social events after paper sessions, while online attendees have to log off. This would achieve a diversity of attendees, with scholars from the Global South being able to access events remotely, but could also lead to segregating online participants, thereby not achieving inclusion. The paper's insights are informed by a survey of several AIS chapters from the Global South and feedback from Senior Scholars and AIS conference organisers.</p><p>In the fifth article, Cram and D'Arcy (<span>2023</span>) explore employee judgements of cybersecurity legitimacy as a new angle for understanding employee compliance with cybersecurity policies. Using a three-wave survey, they find that negative legitimacy judgements mediate the relationship between management support and compliance, as well as between cybersecurity inconvenience and compliance. The results provide support for cybersecurity legitimacy as an important influence on employee compliance with cybersecurity initiatives. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

作为编辑,我读了很多书,其中绝大多数,唉,我们最终都没有出版。在这篇社论中,我想简要地反思标题的性质及其在向潜在读者传达快速信息方面的有效性。在我的整个职业生涯中,我从来没有看到过任何关于如何为研究论文创建标题的建议。一般来说,标题是有意义的,并提供一些线索,以了解文章的内容。有时我们会看到一个真正吸引眼球的标题,激发灵感的,甚至是令人厌恶的,这取决于我们个人的品味。下面是一篇论文的题目,很遗憾,我们没有发表:“基于鼠群鹈鹕的深度学习和序列挖掘的网页推荐”。你对此有何感想?仅前三个字就足以让你兴奋或沮丧。为什么作者认为这篇文章可能适合ISJ是另一回事,但标题本身就有某种独特的品质,可能会吸引你,也可能会让你反感。因此,正如标题的创作是一个主观过程一样,标题的解释也是一个主观过程。但标题的某些方面值得更仔细地研究一下。例如,我们可以考察长度、深度、可理解性、适用性等等。在下面的段落中,我提供了一些最近的ISJ标题和我自己的分析。我的目的是提醒读者注意标题的潜在价值,并委婉地指出,标题的创作本身就是一门值得仔细研究和实践的艺术。在一个极端情况下,我看到的标题几乎和摘要一样长。这些内容往往是平淡无奇的描述,而不是创造性的奇思妙想。较长的标题通常由两部分组成,中间用破折号或冒号隔开。作者似乎想在标题中塞进尽可能多的研究部分,在某些情况下包括所有调节和中介变量的列表。这可能对向潜在读者传达论文的实质内容很有效,也可能对延长一两行简历很有效。但这真的有必要吗?有谁能想出一个更简洁的标题,同时又能吸引潜在读者呢?近年来,我在ISJ上看到的最长的一篇论文是Kranz等人(2016)的《理解吸收能力和二元性对商业模式变革过程的影响:以内部部署和云计算软件为例》。它非常全面,当然为读者提供了非常清晰的信息,让他们了解文章的内容。相比之下,ISJ上最短的标题(不包括社论)是Clarke(2016)的“大数据,大风险”。这篇文章不仅短小精悍,而且颇具煽动性和争议性。例如,那些迷恋大数据的人可能不喜欢它。它似乎嵌入了研究人员的个人立场。作为一个标题,我认为它很有吸引力,它当然传达了文章本身的本质。有时,一个标题有一种古怪的味道,接近于教义,也就是说,它使用了一个短语或单词组合,似乎有些不合适。这可能会引发新的解读。例如,Gerlach等人(2019)“松弛线上的火烈鸟:公司在平衡处理客户信息和隐私的竞争需求方面面临的挑战”。火烈鸟的原因吗?这是一个谜题,只有在结论的最后一句话才得到解答(Gerlach等人,2019年,第567页),作者写道:“由于他们站在‘摇摆的松弛线上’,公司必须像火烈鸟一样,学会保持平衡的姿态而不会摔倒。”将该组织比喻为火烈鸟的说法会流行起来吗?到目前为止,有限的证据表明,这种情况还没有发生:这篇文章是整个威利在线图书馆中唯一一篇在2023年7月28日的接受期刊中出现“火烈鸟”一词的文章
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Quirks, neologisms, provocations and the mundane: Titles and interpretations

As editor, I get to read a lot of titles, the vast majority of which, alas, we do not end up publishing. In this editorial, I would like to reflect briefly on the nature of titles and their effectiveness in conveying a quick message to a potential reader.

Throughout the course of my career, I cannot ever recall seeing any advice about how to create a title for a research paper. Titles in general are meaningful and give some clues as to the content of the article that follows. Sometimes we see a title that really catches the eye, that inspires, or even that disgusts, depending on our individual taste. Here is an example of a title of a paper that, regrettably, we did not publish: ‘Rat Swarm Pelican Based Deep Learning And Sequence Mining For Web Page Recommendation’. How do you feel about that? The first three words alone may suffice to turn you on or off. Why the authors thought that the article might be suitable for the ISJ is another matter, but the title alone has a certain unique quality that might seduce or repel you. Thus, just as the creation of a title is a subjective process, so too is the interpretation of a title. But there are some aspects of a title that are worth examining a little more carefully. For instance, we can look at length, depth, comprehensibility, suitability and so forth. In the paragraphs below, I offer some recent ISJ titles and my own analysis. My purpose is to alert readers to the potential for value in a title, and to gently suggest that the creation of a title is itself an art that is worth examining and practicing carefully.

At one extreme, I have seen titles that are almost as long as the abstract. These often tend to mundane description rather than creative quirkiness. The longer titles often have two parts, separated by a dash or colon. It seems that the authors want to cram into the title as many parts of the study as possible, including in some cases a list of all the moderating and mediating variables. This is probably effective both in conveying the substance of a paper to potential readers, and in lengthening one's cv by a line or two. But is it really necessary? Could one devise a more frugal title that is nevertheless attractive to potential readers? The longest I can see at the ISJ in recent years is Kranz et al. (2016) ‘Understanding the influence of absorptive capacity and ambidexterity on the process of business model change: The case of on-premise and cloud computing software’. It is quite comprehensive and certainly provides very clear information to the reader on what to expect in the article. In contrast, the shortest title at the ISJ (excluding editorials) is Clarke's (2016) ‘Big Data, Big Risks’. Not only is this short and pithy, but it is also quite provocative and controversial. It may be disliked by those who are enamoured of big data for instance. It seems to embed the personal stance of the researcher. As a title, I think it is quite attractive and it certainly conveys the essence of the article itself.

Sometimes, a title has a quirky flavour to it that borders on the catachrestical, that is, it uses a turn of phrase or a combination of words that seems somehow out of place. It may invite a new interpretation. For instance, Gerlach et al. (2019) ‘Flamingos on a Slackline: Companies' Challenges of Balancing the Competing Demands of Handling Customer Information and Privacy’. Why Flamingos? It is a puzzle that is only resolved in the very last sentence of the conclusion (Gerlach et al., 2019, p. 567), where the authors write: ‘As they are standing on “wobbling slacklines,” companies have to become flamingos and learn to maintain a balanced stance without falling over’. Will the metaphor of the organisation as a flamingo take off? The limited evidence available so far suggests that it has not yet happened: this article is the only one in the entire Wiley Online Library where the word ‘flamingo’ appears in the title. In the AIS eLibrary, the word ‘flamingo’ appears 11 times (counted in late April, 2023) but all of these items either reference this same article or a book published by Flamingo Press.

Sometimes titles introduce neologisms, for example De Moya and Pallud's (2020) ‘From Panopticon to Heautopticon: A New Form of Surveillance Introduced by Quantified-Self Practices’ or juxtapose words in novel combinations, for example Tamm et al.'s (2022) ‘Creative Analytics: Towards Data-Inspired Creative Decisions’. They may also present a playful counterpoint of ideas, for example Melville et al. (2023) ‘Putting Humans Back in the Loop: An Affordance Conceptualization of the 4th Industrial Revolution’.

Personally, I think that catachreses, neologisms and other innovative elements of language are generally effective components of a title, so long as they are neither taken to an extreme nor deliberately intended to confuse the reader in the context of the research; as editor I appreciate this kind of novelty. Thus, titles are entities that offer creative potential. As I note above, a title that embodies a metaphor may challenge contemporary knowledge patterns with catachrestical imagination. While reviewers do occasionally take issue with a title, they are often below the bar of critical appraisal and so authors should feel the freedom to be creative when crafting a title: flex your imagination a little, craft a vivacious or quirky turn-of-phrase, shun the mundane and reveal a novel perspective that can attract the attention of your readers.

I will not belabour the point, but I deliberately craft the titles of editorials in a similar manner: quirkiness attracts! For instance, ‘Appreciating Alien Thinking’, ‘The Art of Vivacious Variance’, ‘The Limitations of Limitations’ and the title of the editorial of the previous issue of this journal, which started off with ‘Pickled Eggs’. Indeed, most editorials have pithy titles that punctuate myths and misconceptions, or that offer a quirky combination of ideas. I hope that this issue's title is no different.

In this last issue of 2023, we present six articles and two additional editorials.

In the first article, Weiss et al. (2023) illustrate how BMW, a German manufacturer of high-end cars, designed platform boundary resources to facilitate the development of apps for its onboard infotainment system. Using an action research approach, the authors provide detailed insights into how BMW involved app developers, referred to as lead complementors, in the design process of boundary resources. Over the course of three multi-year episodes, the authors report on the design improvements of boundary resources such as standardised platform interfaces, development tools and platform governance processes. By introducing the notion of lead complementor involvement, the authors transfer the well-known concept of lead users to the context of digital platforms. They offer four propositions that help us to understand and implement lead complementor involvement as an interactive process for improving the design of platform boundary resources.

In the second article, Yang et al. (2023) explore how weak and strong signals affect venture capital funding acquired by digital startups in various industries in China. Drawing on signalling theory and institutional legitimacy theory, the authors suggest that application downloads function as a novel strong signal that can reduce market legitimacy concerns, and previous-round venture capitalist reputation as a traditional strong signal that mitigates regulatory legitimacy concerns. Further, they articulate the interaction mechanism of these strong and weak signals by demonstrating their complementary or substitutive effects in alleviating information asymmetry on startup quality, which provides implications for digital startups to secure venture capital financing. Theoretically, the authors explicitly examine the simultaneous influence of multiple signals of different strengths on venture capital funding. They also reveal the contextual mechanism of signals in the emerging economy with weak institutional power and high uncertainty.

In the third article, Tim et al. (2023) advance our understanding of digital resilience, specifically the capacity of individuals to recover from exogenous shocks, through the effective design of IS solutions. The authors present an action design research (ADR) project conducted during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, where they successfully developed a telemonitoring system. This system has been instrumental in supporting over 115 frontline healthcare workers in monitoring the symptoms of more than 1000 patients. Based on the ADR project, the article proposes an ADAPT framework informing effective design of IS solutions for resilience against exogenous shocks. The framework contributes new design process knowledge for a crisis-driven IS design process characterised by urgency, limited resources and diverse stakeholder participation. By offering new insights and practical recommendations, the authors aim to equip design teams with the knowledge required to contribute to crisis-driven design endeavours that tackle the pressing and urgent challenges of our time.

In the fourth article, Marabelli et al. (2023) explore the challenges and opportunities associated with hybrid conferences. The authors draw on lessons learned from the COVID-19 pandemic, when most conferences worldwide were held first online and then in hybrid mode, and consider the extent to which remote access increased inclusion. The authors argue that academic organisations such as the Association for Information Systems (AIS) should examine ways to continue the practice of allowing remote access to major conferences such as ICIS, AMCIS, ECIS and PACIS. At the same time, the authors acknowledge several issues concerning hybrid conferences, such as: the need for costly technologies and expensive venues, for whoever attends in person; the complexity involved in scheduling sessions that accommodate different time zones; and the possibility that a hybrid conference might lead to first and second class citizens, where the people who attend in person enjoy coffee breaks and social events after paper sessions, while online attendees have to log off. This would achieve a diversity of attendees, with scholars from the Global South being able to access events remotely, but could also lead to segregating online participants, thereby not achieving inclusion. The paper's insights are informed by a survey of several AIS chapters from the Global South and feedback from Senior Scholars and AIS conference organisers.

In the fifth article, Cram and D'Arcy (2023) explore employee judgements of cybersecurity legitimacy as a new angle for understanding employee compliance with cybersecurity policies. Using a three-wave survey, they find that negative legitimacy judgements mediate the relationship between management support and compliance, as well as between cybersecurity inconvenience and compliance. The results provide support for cybersecurity legitimacy as an important influence on employee compliance with cybersecurity initiatives. This is significant because it highlights to managers the importance of not simply expecting compliant employee behaviour to follow from the introduction of cybersecurity initiatives, but that employees need to be convinced that the initiatives are fair and reasonable.

The sixth article (Adam et al., 2023) is the sole survivor of the first paper development workshop that we organised in June 2021. It is introduced in a separate editorial (Eckhardt, 2023) by the organiser and editor of the paper development workshops.

We complete this issue with a short editorial (Davison et al., 2023) in which we explore the genre of practitioner papers, a recently revamped category of submission at the ISJ. We describe what we are looking for in a practitioner paper and explain the criteria that we suggest could be used to evaluate such submissions.

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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.
期刊最新文献
Issue Information Issue Information Issue Information Digital transformation in Latin America: Challenges and opportunities Examining formation and alleviation of information security fatigue by using job demands–resources theory
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