Management information systems: conceptual foundations, structure, and development (2nd ed.)
Management information systems: conceptual foundations, structure, and development (2nd ed.)
A logical design methodology for relational databases using the extended entity-relationship model
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Can there be a science of information?
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Are we scientists or engineers?
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Communications of the ACM
Turing Award lecture on computational complexity and the nature of computer science
Communications of the ACM
The computer scientist as toolsmith II
Communications of the ACM
The sciences of the artificial (3rd ed.)
The sciences of the artificial (3rd ed.)
A new social contract for research
Communications of the ACM
Information rules: a strategic guide to the network economy
Information rules: a strategic guide to the network economy
Communications of the ACM
Empirical research in information systems: the practice of relevance
MIS Quarterly - Special issue on intensive research in information systems
The entity-relationship model—toward a unified view of data
ACM Transactions on Database Systems (TODS) - Special issue: papers from the international conference on very large data bases: September 22–24, 1975, Framingham, MA
Computer science as empirical inquiry: symbols and search
Communications of the ACM
Beyond calculation
Management Information Systems: Conceptual Foundations, Structure and Development
Management Information Systems: Conceptual Foundations, Structure and Development
Modelling the Time Dimension in an Entity-Relationship Diagram
Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Entity-Relationship Approach
A Normal Form For Entity-Relationship Diagrams
Proceedings of the Fourth International Conference on Entity-Relationship Approach
An EER-Based Conceptual Model and Query Language for Time-Series Data
ER '98 Proceedings of the 17th International Conference on Conceptual Modeling
Design and natural science research on information technology
Decision Support Systems
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Computer and related information and communication technologies have profoundly affected the shape of modern society. Shepherding the creation and utilization of effective and efficient computational technologies are the joint tasks of Computer Science and Information Systems researchers. Their realm is to understand and explicate the nature of those technologies and how and why they come into existence. This knowledge forms the foundation of theories to explain and, hopefully, to predict their impacts on individuals, groups, organizations, and society as a whole. The very creation of an innovative technology focused on a specific problem in a specific context can have far reaching effects, completely unpredicted and unintended by the innovator. We argue that researchers in Computer Science and Information Systems must be cognizant of the broader implications of their work and encourage their interaction with practitioners and researchers in a variety of disciplines to identify fruitful areas of scientific inquiry.