-------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: [AISWorld] Journal of Information Technology (JIT) ICIS Special Collection "Innovation in the Digital World" Still in Open Access Date: Sun, 19 Apr 2020 19:40:34 +1000 From: Daniel Schlagwein schlagwein@sydney.edu.au To: AIS World Mailing List aisworld@lists.aisnet.org
Dear colleagues,
Reminder: JIT's ICIS special collection on "Innovation in the Digital World" is still in open access until the end of the month.
Special collections are thematic selections of previously published JIT articles made available as open access for a limited time.
The special collection includes:
*Generative innovation: a comparison of lightweight and heavyweight IT* https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1057/jit.2016.15 Bendik Bygstad
This paper proposes a simple terminology for understanding and dealing with two current phenomena; we suggest calling them heavyweight and lightweight IT. Heavyweight IT denotes the well-established knowledge regime of large systems, developing ever more sophisticated solutions through advanced integration. Lightweight IT is suggested as a term for the new knowledge regime of mobile apps, sensors and bring-your-own-device, also called consumerisation and Internet-of-Things. The key aspect of lightweight IT is not only the cheaper and more available technology compared with heavyweight IT, but the fact that its deployment is frequently done by users or vendors, bypassing the IT departments. Our theoretical lens is generativity, the idea that complex phenomena arise from interactions among basic elements. In the context of IT, generativity helps to explain the creative potential of flexible digital technology for knowledgeable professionals and users. The research questions are: how is generativity different in heavyweight and lightweight IT, and what is the generative relationship between heavyweight and lightweight IT? These questions were investigated through a study of four cases in the health sector. Our findings show that (i) generativity enfolds differently in heavyweight and lightweight IT and (ii) generativity in digital infrastructures is supported by the interaction of loosely coupled heavyweight and lightweight IT. The practical design implication is that heavyweight and lightweight IT should be only loosely integrated, both in terms of technology, standardisation and organisation.
*Copy, transform, combine: exploring the remix as a form of innovation* https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1057/s41265-017-0043-9 Christoph M. Flath, Sascha Friesike, Marco Wirth, Frédéric Thiesse
The reuse of existing knowledge is an indispensable part of the creation of novel ideas. In the creative domain knowledge reuse is a common practice known as “remixing”. With the emergence of open internet-based platforms in recent years, remixing has found its way from the world of music and art to the design of arbitrary physical goods. However, despite its obvious relevance for the number and quality of innovations on such platforms, little is known about the process of remixing and its contextual factors. This paper considers the example of Thingiverse, a platform for the 3D printing community that allows its users to create, share, and access a broad range of printable digital models. We present an explorative study of remixing activities that took place on the platform over the course of six years by using an extensive set of data on models and users. On the foundation of these empirically observed phenomena, we formulate a set of theoretical propositions and managerial implications regarding (1) the role of remixes in design communities, (2) the different patterns of remixing processes, (3) the platform features that facilitate remixes, and (4) the profile of the remixing platform’s users.
*The digital platform: a research agenda* https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1057/s41265-016-0033-3 Mark de Reuver, Carsten Sørensen, Rahul C. Basole
As digital platforms are transforming almost every industry today, they are slowly finding their way into the mainstream information systems (ISs) literature. Digital platforms are a challenging research object because of their distributed nature and intertwinement with institutions, markets and technologies. New research challenges arise as a result of the exponentially growing scale of platform innovation, the increasing complexity of platform architectures and the spread of digital platforms to many different industries. This paper develops a research agenda for digital platforms research in IS. We recommend researchers seek to (1) advance conceptual clarity by providing clear definitions that specify the unit of analysis, degree of digitality and the sociotechnical nature of digital platforms; (2) define the proper scoping of digital platform concepts by studying platforms on different architectural levels and in different industry settings; and (3) advance methodological rigour by employing embedded case studies, longitudinal studies, design research, data-driven modelling and visualisation techniques. Considering current developments in the business domain, we suggest six questions for further research: (1) Are platforms here to stay? (2) How should platforms be designed? (3) How do digital platforms transform industries? (4) How can data-driven approaches inform digital platforms research? (5) How should researchers develop theory for digital platforms? and (6) How do digital platforms affect everyday life?
*Digital innovation and institutional entrepreneurship: Chief Digital Officer perspectives of their emerging role https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1057/s41265-018-0055-0* Sanja Tumbas, Nicholas Berente, Jan vom Brocke
In this study, we explore the role of Chief Digital Officer (CDO) through the perspectives of CDOs in thirty-five organizations. In enacting their emerging role, CDOs must navigate the existing institutionalized context of established information technology (IT) roles and respective jurisdictional claims. We find that CDOs intentionally draw on the term “digital” to distance themselves from existing executive roles in order to gain legitimacy. CDOs as institutional entrepreneurs take a focal role in both: (1) articulating and developing the emerging “digital” logic of action and (2) enacting this digital logic through strategies such as grafting, bridging, and decoupling to navigate tensions between the existing and emerging approaches to innovation with digital technologies.
*The role of discourse in transforming digital infrastructures* https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/0268396219831994 Egil Øvrelid, Bendik Bygstad
Radical shifts in large information technology programmes or digital infrastructures are unusual, but they do occur, usually as a consequence of problems or misalignment. What we know less about is the role of discourse in these shifts. Our interest in this article is to investigate the role of discourse when digitalisation programmes encounter problems. Building on Foucault’s theory of discourse, our research question is: what is the role of discourse in the transformation of digital infrastructures? Our research approach is a critical realist case study, discussing three cases from eHealth innovation. We use Foucault’s archaeological methodology to identify the emerging discursive formations when a programme encounters difficulties. This enables us to analyse the causal relationship between discursive formations and other mechanisms in the infrastructure. We offer two contributions: first, we outline a framework to understand the role of discursive formations in digital transformation; second, we propose a set of configurations to explain how contextual factors and causal mechanisms contingently lead to the transformation of a digital infrastructure.
*Disruption as worldview change: A Kuhnian analysis of the digital music revolution* https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/0268396219835101 Kai Riemer, Robert B. Johnston
Why is it that technology-enabled industry disruptions appear entirely inevitable with hindsight, yet practitioners in disrupted businesses typically struggle to detect and respond appropriately to disruption while it is unfolding? We term this surprising contradiction ‘interpretive discontinuity’ and use it to problematize the established understanding of disruption in the literature. We suggest that the contradiction at the heart of interpretive discontinuity holds an important key to what exactly changes during disruption and why. By juxtaposing an empirical case of disruption in the music industry with theoretical resources sensitive to the nature of radical change – Thomas Kuhn’s work in the unrelated field of scientific practice – we demonstrate that it is productive to understand disruption as a Kuhnian paradigm shift. We are then able to trace interpretive discontinuity to the gestalt switch in worldview that accompanies such a paradigm shift. This insight sheds new light on both what is actually ‘disruptive’ about disruption and also on the limitations of prior work theorizing disruption. Our work is important because it adds to the literature on disruptive innovation important yet overlooked conceptual tools in Kuhn’s work – the role of exemplars, the worldview aspect of a paradigm, and paradigm incommensurability.
Special Issue Call for Papers:
*Regulation in the Age of Digitalization https://journals.sagepub.com/pb-assets/cmscontent/JIN/JIT%20CFP%20SI%20Regulation%20and%20IT%202020-03-08%20DS.pdf* (deadline 2020-12-31) Editors: Danny Gozman, Kalle Lyytinen, Tom Butler
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JIT homepage (note, we are publishing now with SAGE, not Palgrave/Springer as previously) https://journals.sagepub.com/home/jin
Best wishes
Daniel
------------------------------ *Dr Daniel Schlagwein* Associate Professor | The University of Sydney Business School | Business Information Systems http://sydney.edu.au/business/information_systems Co-Editor-in-Chief | Journal of Information Technology https://journals.sagepub.com/home/jin
*The University of Sydney* Abercrombie Building (H70), Room 4072 | The University of Sydney NSW 2006 | Australia +61286277407 | schlagwein@sydney.edu.au | sydney.edu.au/business/schlagwein https://sydney.edu.au/business/about/our-people/academic-staff/schlagwein.html /
USYD Profile https://business.sydney.edu.au/staff/schlagwein | Research: Digital Work https://www.researchgate.net/project/Digital-Work-Digital-Nomadism | Digital Nomadism https://www.researchgate.net/project/Digital-Work-Digital-Nomadism | Crowdsourcing https://www.researchgate.net/project/Crowdsourcing-24 | Openness https://www.researchgate.net/project/Openness-and-Information-Technology https://www.researchgate.net/project/Openness-and-Information-Technology _______________________________________________ AISWorld mailing list AISWorld@lists.aisnet.org