Forces, trends and opportunities in MS/OR
Operations Research
Decision Support with Web-Enabled Software
Interfaces
Evolving data into mining solutions for insights
Communications of the ACM - Evolving data mining into solutions for insights
The Role of the Management Sciences in Research on Personalization
Management Science
Internet-Based Virtual Stock Markets for Business Forecasting
Management Science
Revenue Management and E-Commerce
Management Science
Models for Supply Chains in E-Business
Management Science
Management Science
Costly Bidding in Online Markets for IT Services
Management Science
Group Buying on the Web: A Comparison of Price-Discovery Mechanisms
Management Science
Managing Online Auctions: Current Business and Research Issues
Management Science
Note on Online Auctions with Costly Bid Evaluation
Management Science
The role of e-marketplaces in relationship-based supply chains: a survey
IBM Systems Journal
Buyer's Efficient E-Sourcing Structure: Centralize or Decentralize?
Journal of Management Information Systems
An Analysis of Diversity in Electronic Commerce Research
International Journal of Electronic Commerce
Modeling consumer acceptance probabilities
Expert Systems with Applications: An International Journal
Wireless Personal Communications: An International Journal
E-Commerce Growth and the Changing Structure of the Retail Sales Industry
International Journal of E-Business Research
Electronic commerce sales' response to gasoline price
International Journal of Electronic Finance
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This begins a two-part commentary on management science and e-business, the theme of this two-part special issue. After explaining the topical clusters that give organization to both parts, we pose two key questions concerning the impact of the emerging digital economy on management science research: What fundamentally new research questions arise, and what kind of research enables progress on them. We sketch the papers appearing in this part from the perspective of both these questions, and offer summary comments on the first question based on the papers in both parts. The principal conclusion is that the digital economy is giving birth to new research questions in three main ways (not all independent): by enabling and popularizing several types of technology-mediated interactions, by spawning large-scale digital data sources, and by creating recurring operational decisions that need to be automated.