SERIES EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION; FOREWORD; THINKING ABOUT THEORIES; CHAPTER 1 FOUNDATIONS OF HUMAN-COMPUTER INTERACTION IN MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS An Introduction; PART I DISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVES AND THE USERS; CHAPTER 2 INFORMATION INTERACTIONS Bridging Disciplines in the Creation of New Technologies; CHAPTER 3 HCI AS MIS; CHAPTER 4 WHO IS THE USER? INDIVIDUALS, GROUPS, COMMUNITIES; PART II IT DEVELOPMENT: THEORIES OF INDIVIDUAL AND GROUP WORK; CHAPTER 5 ADVANCING THE THEORY OF DSS DESIGN FOR USER CALIBRATION; CHAPTER 6 DECISIONAL GUIDANCE Broadening the Scope.
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Offers the research by a set of authors who span the MIS and HCI fields. This book focuses on the basics of HCI, with emphasis on concepts, issues, theories, and models that are related to understanding human tasks, and the interactions among humans, tasks, information, and technologies in organizational contexts in general.
Human-computer interaction and management information systems.