MY PAPERS

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Impacts of COVID-19: A Research Agenda to Support People in Their Fight
Venkatesh, V.
International Journal of Information Management
,
2020
Citation:

Venkatesh, V. "Impacts of COVID-19: A Research Agenda to Support People in Their Fight," International Journal of Information Management (55), 2020, 102197. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijinfomgt.2020.102197

JIF (2021):
18.96
; JIF (5-year):
16.58
+
ABSTRACT

Grounded in the vast changes to work life (jobs) and home life that people are facing due to the COVID-19 pandemic (hereinafter COVID), this article presents five research directions related to COVID's impacts on jobs (i.e., job loss, job changes, job outcomes, coping, and support) and five research directions related to COVID;s impact on home life (i.e., home life changes, children, life-related outcomes, social life, and support). In addition to this, I discuss overarching possible research directions and considerations for researchers, editors, and reviewers, as we continue our scientific journey to support people through this pandemic and beyond. I organize these directions and considerations into two sets of five each: focal groups that should be studied (i.e., underprivileged populations, different countries and cultural contexts, women (vs. men), workers in healthcare (frontline workers), elderly and at-risk) and five general issues and special considerations (i.e., role of technology as the oxygen, pre- vs. mid- vs. post-COVID studies, constraints on data collection/research due to COVID, evolution of COVID), and focus on contextualization (generalizability is irrelevant).

ICT for Development in Rural India: A Longitudinal Study of Women's Health Outcomes
Venkatesh, V., Sykes, T.A., and Zhang, X.
MIS Quarterly
,
2020
Citation:

Venkatesh, V., Sykes, T.A., and Zhang, X. "ICT for Development in Rural India: A Longitudinal Study of Women's Health Outcomes," MIS Quarterly (44:2), 2020, 605-629. https://doi.org/10.25300/misq/2020/12342

JIF (2021):
8.51
; JIF (5-year):
12.41
+
ABSTRACT

With a view toward improving the success of information and communication technology (ICT) initiatives in less developed countries in general and India in particular, this work seeks to uncover reasons for success and failure of ICT for development (ICT4D) initiatives. We drew on social networks theory in general and social contagion theory in particular, and examined the impact of advice network constructs on ICT kiosk use and the impact of ICT kiosk use on women�??s health outcomes (i.e., seeking modern medical care and maternal mortality). A two-level model (i.e., village and individual) was developed to understand how women in rural India were influenced by other women in their advice networks to use ICT kiosks, and the effects of ICT kiosk use on seeking modern medical care and maternal mortality. At the village level, we proposed lead user network effects. At the individual level, we proposed structural network effects of other women in a focal woman�??s network on individual outcomes of ICT kiosk use, seeking modern medical care, and maternal mortality. We focused on network position (i.e., centrality) and network tie strength (i.e., strong ties and weak ties) as explanatory variables. Specifically, we argued that strong tie centrality will have an adverse effect on ICT kiosk use, whereas weak tie centrality will have a favorable effect. We also argued ICT kiosk use will have a positive effect on seeking modern medical care and a negative effect on maternal mortality. Finally, we argued that seeking modern medical care will have a negative effect on maternal mortality. Our model was mostly supported in data collected about 6,710 women in 10 intervention group villages in rural India and 8,344 women in the control group villages over a period of approximately 7 years.

Blockchain, Adoption, and Financial Inclusion in India: Research Opportunities
Schuetz, S.W. and Venkatesh, V.
International Journal of Information Management
,
2020
Citation:

Schuetz, S.W. and Venkatesh, V. �??Blockchain, Adoption, and Financial Inclusion in India: Research Opportunities,�?�?�International Journal of Information Management?�(52), 2020, 101936. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijinfomgt.2019.04.009

JIF (2021):
18.96
; JIF (5-year):
16.58
+
ABSTRACT

The economic development of rural India requires connecting remote villages to local and global supply chains. Yet, high rates of financial exclusion inhibit rural Indians from participating in these supply networks. We review the literature on financial inclusion, adoption, and blockchain in India, and posit that to resolve financial exclusion, the four challenges of geographical access, high cost, inappropriate banking products, and financial illiteracy need to be overcome. Next, we argue that blockchain technologies hold the potential to overcome most of these challenges. However, for blockchain technologies to become the cornerstone of financial inclusion initiatives, an understanding of technology adoption in India is needed. To guide the development of such understanding, we develop a research agenda on the antecedents of adoption, adoption patterns, and outcome of adoption. Answering these research questions will lead to a nuanced understanding of adoption of blockchain-based technologies in rural India. The practical contribution of this paper is the discussion of how blockchain can alleviate the issue of financial exclusion in rural India, thereby providing a basis for a solution that could connect rural Indians to global supply chain networks. The theoretical contribution lies in the identification of knowledge gaps that should be answered to achieve financial inclusion of rural Indians.

The Rise of Human Machines: How Cognitive Computing Systems Challenge Assumptions of User-System Interaction
Schuetz, S.W. and Venkatesh, V.
Journal of the Association for Information Systems
,
2020
Citation:

Schuetz, S.W. and Venkatesh, V. �??Research Perspectives: The Rise of Human Machines: How Cognitive Computing Systems Challenge Assumptions of User-System Interaction,�?�?�Journal of the AIS?�(21:2), 2020, 460-482. https://doi.org/10.17705/1jais.00608

JIF (2021):
5.35
; JIF (5-year):
7.79
+
ABSTRACT

Cognitive computing systems (CCS) are a new class of computing systems that implement more human-like cognitive abilities. CCS are not a typical technological advancement but an unprecedented advance toward human-like systems fueled by artificial intelligence. Such systems can adapt to situations, perceive their environments, and interact with humans and other technologies. Due to these properties, CCS are already disrupting established industries, such as retail, insurance, and healthcare. As we make the case in this paper, the increasingly human-like capabilities of CCS challenge five fundamental assumptions that we as IS researchers have held about how users interact with IT artifacts. These assumptions pertain to (1) the direction of the user-artifact relationship, (2) the artifact�??s awareness of its environment, (3) functional transparency, (4) reliability, and (5) the user�??s awareness of artifact use. We argue that the disruption of these five assumptions limits the applicability of our extant body of knowledge to CCS. Consequently, CCS present a unique opportunity for novel theory development and associated contributions. We argue that IS is well positioned to take this opportunity and present research questions that, if answered, will lead to interesting, influential, and original theories.

How Agile Software Development Methods Reduce Work Exhaustion: Insights on Role Perceptions and Organizational Skills
Venkatesh, V., Thong, J.Y.L., Chan, F.K.Y., Hoehle, H., and Spohrer, K.
Information Systems Journal
,
2020
Citation:

Venkatesh, V., Thong, J.Y.L., Chan, F.K.Y., Hoehle, H., and Spohrer, K. �??How Agile Software Development Methods Reduce Work Exhaustion: Insights on Role Perceptions and Organizational Skills,�?�?�Information Systems Journal?�(30:4),?�2020, 733-761. https://doi.org/10.1111/isj.12282

JIF (2021):
7.77
; JIF (5-year):
8.74
+
ABSTRACT

Agile methods are widely used in the software industry as a way to more rapidly develop and deliver new software. They define iterative work processes, advocate self-organization and openness for change, and prescribe how software developers interact with each other and external stakeholders. Despite their popularity, it is unclear how agile methods influence work exhaustion in software developers and how developer skills play into this effect. On the one hand, agile methods may reduce software developers' work exhaustion by levelling out their workload across the entire duration of a project. On the other hand, agile methods exert a high level of pressure on software developers to continuously deliver working software, create many intensive social interactions, and to frequently adapt to changes. In light of these effects, prior research could not explain why some software developers become less exhausted from using agile methods, whereas others perceive the exact opposite. Based on the job demand-control model, we develop a theoretical model connecting agile method use to individual developer skills and to two established determinants of employee exhaustion: role conflict and role ambiguity. We tested our research model in a field study among 1894 software developers in 217 project teams that used agile methods. The random coefficient modelling results show that agile method use facilitates the achievement of clear and unambiguous role perceptions and thereby reduces work exhaustion in developers, particularly if developers possess the organizational skills to effectively interact with others in their organization. We highlight implications for theory on the individual-level effects of software development methods and provide practical insights for software companies.

Shoplifting in Mobile Checkout Settings: Cybercrime in Retail Stores
Aloysius, J.A., Arora, A., and Venkatesh, V.
IT & People
,
2019
Citation:

Aloysius, J.A., Arora, A., and Venkatesh, V. �??Shoplifting in Mobile Checkout Settings: Cybercrime in Retail Stores,�?�?�IT & People?�(32:5), 2019, 1234-1261. https://doi.org/10.1108/itp-06-2018-0292

JIF (2021):
4.48
; JIF (5-year):
4.65
+
ABSTRACT

Purpose �?? Retailers are implementing technology-enabled mobile checkout processes in their stores to improve service quality, decrease labor costs and gain operational efficiency. These new checkout processes have increased customer convenience primarily by providing them autonomy in sales transactions in that store employee interventions play a reduced role. However, this autonomy has the unintended consequence of altering the checks and balances inherent in a traditional employee-assisted checkout process. Retailers, already grappling with shoplifting, with an estimated annual cost of billions of dollars, fear that the problem may be exacerbated by mobile checkout and concomitant customer autonomy. The purpose of this paper is to understand the effect of mobile checkout processes in retail stores on cybercrime in the form of shoplifting enabled by a technology transformed the retail environment. Design/methodology/approach �?? The authors conducted an online survey of a US sample recruited from a crowdsourced platform. The authors test a research model that aims to understand the factors that influence the intention to shoplift in three different mobile checkout settings �?? namely, smartphone checkout settings, store-provided mobile device checkout settings, and employee-assisted mobile checkout settings �?? and compare it with a traditional fixed location checkout setting. Findings �?? The authors found that, in a smartphone checkout setting, intention to shoplift was driven by experiential beliefs and peer influence, and experiential beliefs and peer influence had a stronger effect for prospective shoplifters when compared to experienced shoplifters; in a store-provided mobile devices checkout setting, experiential beliefs had a negative effect on shoplifters�?? intention to shoplift and the effect was weaker for prospective shoplifters when compared to experienced shoplifters. The results also indicated that in an employee-assisted mobile checkout setting, intention to shoplift was driven by experiential beliefs and peer influence, and experiential beliefs had a stronger effect for prospective shoplifters when compared to experienced shoplifters. Originality/value �?? This study is the among the first, if not first, to examine shoplifters�?? intention to shoplift in mobile checkout settings. We provide insights into how those who may not have considered shoplifting in less favorable criminogenic settings may change their behavior due to the autonomy provided by mobile checkout settings and also provide an understanding of the shoplifting intention for both prospective and experienced shoplifters in different mobile checkout settings.

Governance and ICT4D Initiative Success: A Longitudinal Field Study of Ten Villages in Rural India
Venkatesh, V., Sykes, T.A., Rai, A., and Setia, P.
MIS Quarterly
,
2019
Citation:

Venkatesh, V., Sykes, T.A., Rai, A., and Setia, P. �??Governance and ICT4D Initiative Success: A Longitudinal Field Study of Ten Villages in Rural India,�?�?�MIS Quarterly?�(43:4), 2019, 1081-1104. https://doi.org/10.25300/misq/2019/12337

JIF (2021):
8.51
; JIF (5-year):
12.41
+
ABSTRACT

Initiatives to leverage information and communication technologies for development (ICT4D) have attracted huge investments, especially in less developed countries. However, the success rate of such initiatives has been low. Prior research on this topic has argued for various individual and network characteristics as predictors of information and communication technology (ICT) use and consequent benefits. We argue that, in order to garner potential benefits of the local information and knowledge resources embedded in citizens�?? advice networks, hybrid governance from a combination of the local government and the technology sponsor is required. We further theorize that leadership by the local government or the technology sponsor for different stages of the ICT4D initiative affects the effectiveness of the pathways through which benefits of citizens�?? advice networks accrue. We found support, in a longitudinal field study in ten villages in India (2,980 heads of households), for our theory that hybrid governance outperforms homogeneous governance models. Leadership by the local government for the pre-launch stage and by the technology sponsor for the post-launch stage was the most effective in promoting the behavioral pathway for economic benefits�??that is, leveraging advice networks for ICT use and consequent gains in income. In contrast, leadership by the technology sponsor for the pre-launch stage and by the local government for the post-launch stage was the most effective in promoting the informational pathway�??that is, leveraging information and knowledge from advice networks to directly generate gains in income. Adjacent villages that did not have a similar ICT4D intervention did not experience a comparable growth in farmer income.

Children�??s Internet Addiction, Family-to-Work Conflict, and Job Outcomes
Venkatesh, V., Sykes, T.A., Chan, F.K.Y., Thong, J.Y.L., and Hu, P.
MIS Quarterly
,
2019
Citation:

Venkatesh, V., Sykes, T.A., Chan, F.K.Y., Thong, J.Y.L., and Hu, P. �??Children�??s Internet Addiction, Family-to-Work Conflict, and Job Outcomes,�?�?�MIS Quarterly?�(43:3), 2019, 903-927. https://doi.org/10.25300/misq/2019/12338

JIF (2021):
8.51
; JIF (5-year):
12.41
+
ABSTRACT

This paper examines the role of parenting behaviors in influencing children�??s Internet addiction and the consequences of children�??s Internet addiction on parents�?? job outcomes. First, we draw on attachment theory to theorize that five parenting behaviors�??i.e., parental control, monitoring, unstructured time, dissuasion, and rationalization�??affect children�??s Internet addiction and their effects are moderated by the children�??s views of parent attachment. Second, we draw on research on work-family interface to theorize that children�??s Internet addiction affects parents�?? job outcomes�??i.e., job satisfaction, organizational commitment, and work exhaustion�??and the effects are mediated by family-to-work conflict. We tested our hypotheses using an integrated research approach that includes quantitative and qualitative analyses. We conducted an online survey to collect quantitative responses from 776 parent-child dyads. The model testing results showed that the effects of parenting behaviors on children�??s Internet addiction, except for dissuasion, were moderated by the children�??s views of parent attachment. Also, family-to-work conflict mediated the effects of children�??s Internet addiction on parents�?? job satisfaction, organizational commitment, and work exhaustion. Further, we collected qualitative data via interviews from 50 parents to cross-validate our model testing results.

The Government of Jamaica�??s Electronic Procurement System: Experiences and Lessons Learned
Ahmad, T., Aljafari, R., and Venkatesh, V.
Internet Research
,
2019
Citation:

Ahmad, T., Aljafari, R., and Venkatesh, V. �??The Government of Jamaica�??s Electronic Procurement System: Experiences and Lessons Learned,�?�?�Internet Research?�(29:6), 2019, 1571-1588. https://doi.org/10.1108/intr-02-2019-0044

JIF (2021):
6.35
; JIF (5-year):
7.60
+
ABSTRACT

Purpose �?? Realizing value from information and communication technology (ICT) in procurement in developing countries is complex due to diverse stakeholders and intertwined procurement processes. The purpose of this paper is to examine the experience of the Government of Jamaica in leveraging ICTs as an intervention to transform its procurement operations and combat corruption. Design/methodology/approach �?? The study examines conversations with employees in the Government of Jamaica to understand key milestones in its procurement history. Based on the view that the intervention context is an ecosystem where multiple and inconsistent views of the e-procurement system evolve over time, the study analyzes milestones to reveal key actions that contributed either to the initial success of or introduced challenges to the e-procurement system. Findings �?? The findings suggest that inducing positive sentiments about the intervention through transparency will overcome a long history of negative sentiments about the initiatives of government bodies in general. Furthermore, positive sentiments may not be directly related to the e-procurement system. Research limitations/implications �?? The study offers important insights that government bodies in similar contexts can apply to guide initiatives for transforming procurement operations. For instance, training should emphasize not only the technical aspects of the system from the perspective of different stakeholders but also their job descriptions. Future research may examine other initiatives in developing countries to compare the role of sentiments over time. Originality/value �?? The study adopts a unique approach to understand the experience of a developing country in harnessing ICTs to transform procurement operations.

ICT-enabled Refugee Integration: A Research Agenda
AbuJarour, S., Wiesche, M., Andrade, A. D., Fedorowicz, J., Krasnova, H., Olbrich, S., Tan, C-W., Urquhart, C., and Venkatesh, V.
Communications of the Association for Information Systems
,
2019
Citation:

AbuJarour, S., Wiesche, M., Andrade, A. D., Fedorowicz, J., Krasnova, H., Olbrich, S., Tan, C-W., Urquhart, C., and Venkatesh, V. �??ICT-enabled Refugee Integration: A Research Agenda,�?�?�Communications of the Association for Information Systems?�(44:1), 2019, 874-891. https://doi.org/10.17705/1cais.04440

JIF (2021):
0.41
; JIF (5-year):
0.00
+
ABSTRACT

The recent phenomenon that has become known as the European refugee crisis is, in reality, a global problem. Accordingly, issues regarding refugee integration have become a central debate topic worldwide. In this paper, we examine how refugees use information and communication technology (ICT) in different regions across the world to understand how ICT supports their desperate journey to safety, their stay in temporary settlement camps, and their post-settlement inclusion in host countries. We conducted a series of interviews with Syrian refugees in Berlin, Germany, to collect preliminary insights. Then, we organized panel discussions at two key information systems conferences (ICIS 2016 and ECIS 2017) that involved participants from various countries. The panel discussions revealed seven key research themes: accessibility to information, availability of education and linguistic resources, admissibility to labor markets and entrepreneurship opportunities, communicability with home country, connectedness with local population, interactivity with host government, and volunteer coordination. We discuss how ICT might help to address issues related to each theme, present research questions relevant to each theme, and supply an illustration of how ICT has been employed to address an aspect of each theme. Insights gathered lead to theoretical implications and future opportunities for research in the information systems field, practical implications for different stakeholders interested in refugee integration to consider, and social implications related to refugee crisis that we cannot ignore.