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MIS Distinguished Speaker Series

Temple University

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Mar 24 – Shaila Miranda – “Setting an IT Innovation Agenda: The Practice Repertoire of Bots in a Blockchain Discourse”

March 12, 2023 By Aleksi Aaltonen

Time: Friday, 24 March 2023, 10:30–12:00
Room: LW420

Abstract

Communities make sense of social issues through discourse. An “issue” is a matter of potential concern. Issues can involve public policy or innovations. Issues do not exist prior to a discourse, but rather are the product of sensemaking and social construction through discourse. This constitutive nature of community discourse has been noted for information technology (IT) innovation. Through discourse, actors learn vicariously about the innovation, without needing to invest in it. Through discourse, actors advance diverse frames about the innovation, advocating for competing innovations or versions of an innovation – or even subverting the innovation. Prior research has highlighted the distinctive role of mass media in drawing attention to social issues and filtering information about them to shape public opinion. Discourse now takes place on digital mass media, where social bots abound. Though researchers have noted the role played by such bots in other venues, we lack understanding of the role they play in IT innovation discourses. Our study therefore asks: How do social bots participate in an IT innovation discourse? To address this question, we studied seven years of a Twitter blockchain discourse. Because our aim was to isolate the distinctive role of bots, we limited our investigation to discourse occurring in a single geographical area – Australia – to reduce confounds by cultural factors. Using text mining in a computational theory construction approach, we observed social bots to evince three sets of practices: innovation spotlighting, innovation framing, and innovation visibilizing practices. We theorize how this practice repertoire shapes an innovation discourse, i.e., by contributing to setting the agenda for the IT innovation. As the number of social bots grows, understanding how they shape innovation discourses will be essential to key innovation stakeholders and policymakers.

Bio

Shaila M. Miranda is the W.P. Wood Professor of MIS at the Price College of Business, the University of Oklahoma. She has a doctorate in Management Information Systems from the University of Georgia and an M.A. in Sociology from Columbia University. Her research focuses primarily on public discourse and shared meaning in the arenas of digital activism and innovation. She employs a combination of qualitative and computational inductive techniques. Shaila has published a book, Social Analytics, through Prospect Press and her research has appeared in journals such as the MIS Quarterly, Information Systems Research, Journal of Management Information Systems, Small Group Research, Information and Management, and Data Base. She serves as Senior Editor for MIS Quarterly and previously has served as Senior Editor for Information Systems Research.

Tagged With: blockchain, bots, discourse, Innovation

Dec 2 – Robert Gregory – “Skin in the Game: The Transformational Potential of Decentralized Autonomous Organizations”

November 20, 2022 By Aleksi Aaltonen

Time: Friday, 2 December 2022, 10:30–12:00
Room: LW420

Abstract

Decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs) are a new form of organizing that are worth theorizing because of their potential to address collective action problems. As community-facilitated human-machine systems deployed on a blockchain, they rely on self-governance through smart contracts and voluntary member contributions. Yet, the promise of decentralization is difficult to sustain. To this end, this paper engages in phenomenon-based theorizing of DAOs by drawing on the lens of polycentric commons and examining the case of Decentralized Finance (DeFi) DAOs with a specific focus on MakerDAO. We contribute to the burgeoning literature on DAOs and new forms of technology-enabled organizing with a model explaining the transformational potential of DAOs through a set of three mechanisms (sustained participation, collective direction, and scaled organizing). This model explains how polycentric governance as implemented in DAOs helps address the inherent challenges of sustaining collective action in the commons.
Bio
Robert W. Gregory is Associate Professor of Business Technology at University of Miami Herbert Business School. He is also Research Fellow with MIT’s Center for Information Systems Research (CISR). He holds a diploma (combined bachelor’s and master’s degree) in Management Information Systems from the University of Cologne, Germany, a master’s degree in International Management from the Community of European Management Schools (CEMS), and a Ph.D. equivalent, Dr. rer. pol., in Business Administration from Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany. He co-founded and serves as the outgoing president of the AIS special interest group on Digital Innovation, Transformation, and Entrepreneurship (SIGDITE). He serves as Associate Editor for Information Systems Research and Senior Editor for Journal of the Association for Information Systems, where he handles the ‘theory’ paper submissions. He received the Early Career Award from the global Association for Information Systems (2016) and the Best Reviewer Award from Information Systems Research (ISR) and Management Information Systems Quarterly (MISQ). Robert’s research program focuses on novel management and information systems phenomena related to the diffusion and innovation with digital technologies and the associated transformation of individuals, organizations, and markets. His research has appeared in premier journals, including MIS Quarterly, Information Systems Research, and Academy of Management Review. His teaching covers digital innovation and disruption, digital transformation, and product and project management across undergraduate, master’s, MBA, and executive levels and spans multiple countries and cultures. He has worked and collaborated with leading blue chip companies across Europe and USA.

Tagged With: blockchain, commons, dao, decentralization, governance, polycentricity, smart contracts

Sep 24 – Lauren Rhue to present “Man vs. Machine: The Substitutability of AI and Expert Evaluations of Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs)”

September 20, 2021 By Sezgin Ayabakan

Man vs. Machine: The Substitutability of AI and Expert Evaluations of Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs)

by

Lauren Rhue

Assistant Professor of Information Systems
Department of Decision, Operations and Information Technologies
Robert H. Smith School of Business
University of Maryland

Friday, Sep 24

9 – 10 am | Zoom

Abstact:

Initial coin offerings (ICOs) were heralded as a popular method for emerging blockchain and technology ventures to raise capital for their businesses; however, several high-profile ICO scams generated concerns about ICO legitimacy. We examine an ICO-rating platform that provides two evaluation sources, artificial intelligence (AI) and experts, as well as qualitative and quantitative expert evaluations to evaluate ICOs. This study compares the informativeness of the information sources and information types to understand how AI ratings for uncertain quality items, like ICOs, compares to the expert ratings. Using dual-processing theory and cognitive biases, we posit substitutability for quantitative evaluations but complementarity between quantitative and qualitative evaluations. Using nearly 5,000 ICOs and more than 14,000 expert evaluations, we find that 1) experts’ decisions on which ICOs to evaluate contain relevant information, 2) experts and AI quantitative evaluation are substitutes, and 3) quantitative evaluations complement qualitative evaluations. Our paper makes several contributions to the information systems literature related to the substitutability of automation systems for online human reviews, the different processing pathways for qualitative and quantitative evaluations, and the unexpected benefit of cognitive biases.

Tagged With: Artificial Intelligence, blockchain, cognitive biases, dual-processing theory, expert evaluations, ICO-rating platform, Initial coin offerings

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