DocumentCode
2204637
Title
Identifying Theories Used in North American IS Research: A Bottom-Up, Computational Approach
Author
Soper, Daniel S. ; Turel, Ofir
Author_Institution
Inf. Syst. & Decision Sci. Dept., California State Univ., Fullerton, CA, USA
fYear
2015
fDate
5-8 Jan. 2015
Firstpage
4948
Lastpage
4958
Abstract
In an effort to shed light on the current stage of disciplinary evolution in the IS field, this study sought to systematically and objectively identify and document the theories that have been used in North American IS research, as well as to identify trends regarding the adoption of new theories and the rate of theory turnover. To this end, we used computational techniques to search more than 10 million Wikipedia article titles for candidate theory names, and contrasted the resulting list with the complete text of every research article published in three leading North American IS journals over a 24-year period. This process resulted in the identification of more than 300 unique theories that have verifiably appeared in these journals since 1990, along with their respective frequencies of appearance. Analyzing these frequency data revealed a strong upward trend in the number of unique theories appearing in North American IS research, as well as a significant, and likely unsustainable increase in theory turnover.
Keywords
information systems; IS theory adoption; IS theory identification; IS theory turnover; North American IS journals; North American IS research; Wikipedia article titles; bottom-up computational approach; frequency data analysis; information systems; Analytical models; Data models; Electronic publishing; Encyclopedias; Information systems; Internet; IS research; IS theory; theory evolution; theory identification;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
System Sciences (HICSS), 2015 48th Hawaii International Conference on
Conference_Location
Kauai, HI
ISSN
1530-1605
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/HICSS.2015.586
Filename
7070406
Link To Document