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So, Talk to Me: The Effect of
Explicit Goals on the Comprehension of Business Process Narratives
Bill Kuechler and Vijay
Vaishnavi
Abstract
Unstructured data, most of it text-based
and computer mediated, makes up a rapidly growing majority of the
knowledge store of most organizations. Entire classes of information
systems: knowledge management systems and enterprise content
management systems have emerged to monitor, manage and support decision
making from this primarily textual data.
IS research has treated text as a unitary variable. However,
research from cognitive science strongly suggests that a deeper
investigation of how text is comprehended would allow the development
of more effective computer-based knowledge and communications
systems. Our research extends IS research on the effects of
information presentation on decision making by investigating the
attributes of text rather than comparing text to other information
presentation modes such as graphs or numbers. Our study also
contributes to the sparse empirical IS research on problem formulation,
the initial phase of decision making.
Informed by research on information presentation, decision making, and
narrative comprehension we designed a series of experiments that
demonstrate that the explicit inclusion of goal information for
activities in narrative descriptions of problematic business processes
increases overall comprehension, decision making confidence, and short
and long term recall. Based on our experimental findings we
propose that augmenting text-based IS to elicit and saliently present
explicit goal information would significantly enhance the decision
support capability of these systems especially for rapid, ad hoc
decisions about business process situations.
Keywords: Decision support systems, decision
making; human–computer interface, process comprehension
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