A Survey of Information Requirements Analysis Techniques
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
A framework for the design of linguistic user interfaces
A framework for the design of linguistic user interfaces
Contributions of the management sciences to the evolution of management information systems
ACM SIGMIS Database - Information systems and its underlying disciplines: selected papers from the International Conference on Information Systems
MIS and the behavioral sciences: research patterns and prescriptions
ACM SIGMIS Database - Information systems and its underlying disciplines: selected papers from the International Conference on Information Systems
Interpretation of natural language in an information system
IBM Journal of Research and Development
Information and Organization
New research directions for data and knowledge engineering: A philosophy of language approach
Data & Knowledge Engineering
The 'language' of informatics: The nature of information systems
International Journal of Information Management: The Journal for Information Professionals
International Journal of Information Management: The Journal for Information Professionals
On using spheres of meaning to define and dignify the IS discipline
International Journal of Information Management: The Journal for Information Professionals
An integrative semiotic framework for information systems: The social, personal and material worlds
Information and Organization
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This article demonstrates how language views can be adopted into an information systems context. We distinguish here between five language views: denotational, generative, cognitive, behavioristic, and interactionist. These views differ in their assumptions about he origin of linguistic behavior, the primary functions of language, elements of language, and the nature of linguistic knowledge. Information system development approaches can be characterized by their underlying language views. This explains great differences in development methods and research. Thus, language views have implications and should be chosen continency for a given information system context.