Abstract
It is commonly believed that the user's cognitive style should be considered in the design of Management Information Systems and Decision Support Systems. In contrast, an examination of the literature and a consideration of some of the broader issues involved in MIS and DSS design lead to the conclusions that: (1) the currently available literature on cognitive style is an unsatisfactory basis for deriving operational design guidelines, and (2) further cognitive style research is unlikely to provide a satisfactory body of knowledge from which to derive such guidelines. The article presents six specific bases for these two conclusions. From a manager's pespective, the outcome of the study is a suggestion: maintain a healthy skepticism if it is suggested that paper and pencil assessments of the user's cognitive style should be used as a basis for MIS or DSS designs. From a researcher's viewpoint, the study raises two questions: (1) If our research interest is MIS and DSS design, does it seem that further research in cognitive style is a wise allocation of our research resources? (2) If our research interest is cognitive style, does it seem that the use of cognitive style as a basis for MIS and DSS designs will become an important application area?
Keywords
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
Metagraphs: A Tool for Modeling Decision Support Systems
Most decision support systems (DSS) contain stored data, data analysis procedures, and decision models. However, many DSS have grown to the point that the average end user is pr...
THE STRUCTURE OF EXECUTIVE INFORMATION SYSTEMS: AN EXPLORATORY ANALYSIS
ABSTRACT This paper reports on a study which attempted to identify the structure of executive information systems and evaluate their relationship to decision making. The study c...
An Empirical Investigation of Information Search Strategies with Implications for Decision Support System Design
ABSTRACT Understanding how people search through and combine information before making decisions is an important concern in the study of decision making and in the design of dec...
Research Commentary: Introducing a Third Dimension in Information Systems Design—The Case for Incentive Alignment
Prior research has generated considerable knowledge on information systems design from software engineering and user-acceptance perspectives. As organizational processes are inc...
Mapping the Intellectual Structure of MIS, 1980-1985: A Co-Citation Analysis
This study is the second of two studies which assess the intellectual development of MIS. The present study documents the current intellectual structure of MIS research based on...
Publication Info
- Year
- 1983
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 29
- Issue
- 5
- Pages
- 567-579
- Citations
- 359
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1287/mnsc.29.5.567