Auflistung nach Schlagwort "Culture"
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- ZeitschriftenartikelCorporate Digital Responsibility(Business & Information Systems Engineering: Vol. 64, No. 5, 2022) Mueller, Benjamin
- ZeitschriftenartikelDie Rolle der Kultur in der Selbstoffenbarung und Privatsphäre in sozialen Onlinenetzwerken(Wirtschaftsinformatik: Vol. 54, No. 3, 2012) Krasnova, Hanna; Veltri, Natasha F.; Günther, OliverSoziale Onlinenetzwerke (SON) stützen sich ausschließlich auf nutzergenerierten Inhalt um ihren Mitgliedern ein ansprechendes und lohnendes Erlebnis zu bieten. Infolgedessen sind die Belebung der Kommunikation zwischen Nutzern sowie die Stimulierung ihrer Selbstoffenbarung im Netz unerlässlich für die Zukunftsfähigkeit von SON. Soziale Netzwerke sind weltweit beliebt und deren Nutzer werden zunehmend kulturell vielfältiger. Um ihre Mitglieder zu motivieren Informationen zu teilen bedarf es des Verständnisses kultureller Feinheiten. Bisher bietet die derzeitige Forschung nur begrenzte Einblicke in die Rolle der Kultur, die hinter dieser Bereitwilligkeit von Selbstoffenbarung der Nutzer in Onlinenetzwerken steht. Aufbauend auf dem Privatsphärekalkül untersucht diese Studie die Rolle zweier kultureller Dimensionen – Individualismus und Unsicherheitsvermeidung – bei der Selbstoffenbarung auf SON. Die Umfrageergebnisse deutscher und amerikanischer Facebook-Nutzer bilden hierbei die Basis für die Analyse. Die Resultate des Strukturgleichungsmodells und der Multi-Gruppen-Analyse offenbaren deutliche Unterschiede in den kognitiven Strukturen dieser beiden Kulturen. Hierbei spielen Vertrauensannahmen eine entscheidende Rolle bei der Selbstoffenbarung von Nutzern mit individualistischem Hintergrund. Gleichzeitig beeinflusst die Unsicherheitsvermeidung die Auswirkung von den Bedenken hinsichtlich der Privatsphäre. Der Beitrag der Autoren zu der Theorie ist die Ablehnung des universellen Charakters des Privatsphärekalküls. Die Forschungsergebnisse geben den Betreibern von SON eine Reihe von Empfehlungen, um die Erstellung und Teilung von Inhalten ihrer heterogenen Zielgruppen zu stimulieren.AbstractSocial Network Sites (SNSs) rely exclusively on user-generated content to offer engaging and rewarding experience to its members. As a result, stimulating user communication and self-disclosure is vital for the sustainability of SNSs. However, considering that the SNS users are increasingly culturally diverse, motivating this audience to self-disclose requires understanding of their cultural intricacies. Yet existing research offers only limited insights into the role of culture behind the motivation of SNS users to self-disclose. Building on the privacy calculus framework, this study explores the role of two cultural dimensions – individualism and uncertainty avoidance – in self-disclosure decisions of SNS users. Survey responses of US and German Facebook members are used as the basis for our analysis. Structural equation modeling and multi-group analysis results reveal the distinct role of culture in the cognitive patterns of SNS users. The authors find that trusting beliefs play a key role in the self-disclosure decisions of users from individualistic cultures. At the same time, uncertainty avoidance determines the impact of privacy concerns. This paper contributes to the theory by rejecting the universal nature of privacy calculus processes. The findings provide for an array of managerial implications for SNS providers as they strive to encourage content creation and sharing by their heterogeneous members.
- TextdokumentExploring the content composition of online book reviews(INFORMATIK 2020, 2021) Kutzner, Kristin; Schoormann, Thorsten; Knackstedt, RalfToday, anyone can perform an opinion-expressing form of literary criticism by writing online book reviews. Sellers and publishers recognised the strategic potential of such reviews, for example, to increase sales. However, despite the popularity and recognised importance of book reviews, only little is known about the actual content in detail. Drawing on a category system and manually annotated reviews, this study explores the content composition of book reviews. We disclose frequently used content-related book review components and perform a cluster analysis, exploring which components often occur together. Our results support literary scholars in investigating the digital phenomenon of literary criticism and the study illustrates a sample Computational Humanities project which can be transferred to other research endeavours.
- WorkshopbeitragImpact of Culture on the choice of relevant UX Scales(Mensch und Computer 2019 - Workshopband, 2019) Schrepp, Martin; Santoso, Harry BudiWe investigate if the cultural background of a person influences the subjective importance of UX aspects for several common product categories. To clarify this, we replicated a published study with German students in Indonesia. Results show significant differences concerning the rated importance of UX aspects for many product categories. However, a detailed analysis of the results demonstrates that both samples show quite similar rankings of the importance of UX aspects. Thus, the product type has a much bigger impact than cultural differences. In addition, the data show that the impact of culture is considerably lower than the impact of interindividual differences between persons of the same cultural group.
- TextdokumentResponse and Cultural Biases in Information Security Policy Compliance Research(Open Identity Summit 2017, 2017) Kurowski, Sebastian; Dietrich, FabinaThis contribution tries to shed light on whether current information security policy compliance research is affected by response (such as social desirability) or cultural biases. Based upon the hypothesis that response biases may be subject to information processing of the questionnaire item by the respondent, a classification of questionnaire items of 17 surveys is provided. Furthermore, the Individualism and Power Distance indices are gathered for the survey samples. Correlation analysis reveals that the Power Distance index correlates negatively, while Individualism correlates positively with the mean self-reported policy compliance. These findings support previous findings on the role of Power Distance and contradict the influence of response and social desirability biases on self-reported information security policy compliance.
- KonferenzbeitragA Scientific Baseline for Agile Leadership - A Workshop Study(Projektmanagement und Vorgehensmodelle 2022 - Virtuelle Zusammenarbeit und verlorene Kulturen?, 2022) Krieg, Alexander; Penner, Nils; Theobald, Sven; Guckenbiehl, Pascal; Schneider, KurtLeadership faces its biggest transformation in decades. The age of data and information as well as the associated digitalization are the driving forces behind fast and radically changing markets. Sustainability, diversity and self-organization are subjects modern companies and their leadership culture must address. There is plenty of literature on agile leadership and many practitioners and coaches work on building an agile leadership culture. However, we realized that there is a lack of scientific research and understanding regarding what characterizes agile leadership. This paper aims to present a scientific baseline for agile leadership to start closing the gap between practical knowledge and scientific investigation. We conducted three workshops with agile experts to elicit their understanding and experiences with regard to agile leadership and aggregated them into an overview of categories and characteristics. Practitioners can use these insights to identify potential for improvement in their leadership culture, while researchers can build on the results in their future research.