An Evaluation of Empirical Research in Managerial Support Systems
Date
1990
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
This paper describes, summarizes and comments on the empirical studies in the use of three information technologies to support managerial activities: decision support systems (DSS), group decision support systems (GDSS), and expert systems (ES). These are collectively labelled as managerial support systems (MSS). A classification scheme to organize empirical research in MSS is proposed. An overview of empirical work on two major research themes, namely MSS “design” and “effects of use” of MSS, is then presented for the years 1981–1988. Following this overview, the research strategies suitable for empirical research in MSS are discussed. The paper concludes with suggestions about future research directions in the field.
Description
* Elsevier: We are able to post the post print/accepted author manuscript or the pre-print file (http://www.elsevier.com/journal-authors/author-rights-and-responsibilities#author-posting). Article deposited according to publisher's policy 06/16/2015.
Keywords
Decision support systems, Group decision support systems, Expert systems, Decision support aids, Effects of support system use, Design of support systems, Review of empirical DSS research, DSS research strategies
Citation
Benbasat, I. and Nault, B.R., "An Evaluation of Empirical Research in Managerial Support Systems," Decision Support Systems, 6 (1990) 203-226.