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- Title
Information Systems as Representations: A Review of the Theory and Evidence.
- Authors
Recker, Jan; Indulska, Marta; Green, Peter F.; Burton-Jones, Andrew; Weber, Ron
- Abstract
Representation theory proposes that the basic purpose of an information system (IS) is to faithfully represent certain real-world phenomena, allowing users to reason about these phenomena more costeffectively than if they were observed directly. Over the past three decades, the theory has underpinned much research on conceptual modeling in IS analysis and design and, increasingly, research on other IS phenomena such as data quality, system alignment, IS security, and system use. The original theory has also inspired further development of its core premises and advances in methodological guidelines to improve its use and evaluation. Nonetheless, the theory has attracted repeated criticisms regarding its validity, relevance, usefulness, and robustness. Given the burgeoning literature on the theory over time, both positive and negative, the time is ripe for a narrative, developmental review. We review representation theory, examine how it has been used, and critically evaluate its contributions and limitations. Based on our findings, we articulate a set of recommendations for improving its application, development, testing, and evaluation.
- Subjects
REPRESENTATION theory; INFORMATION storage &; retrieval systems; LITERARY theory; CONCEPTUAL models; DATA quality; RECOMMENDER systems
- Publication
Journal of the Association for Information Systems, 2019, Vol 20, Issue 6, p735
- ISSN
1536-9323
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.17705/1jais.00550