The classic example of how seeing from a different context reframes the big question: how do we change? how do we innovate?
The answer in part is this--from different places.
In the past decades, there have been large investments in information technology; in 1999, for example, the IT budget of Federal Express was reported to be US$ 1.4 billion [3]. If companies are to make a return from their IT investments, the new systems must be utilized effectively. Unfortunately, countless systems are never used to their full potential; many simply remain “unexplored, rejected, or forgotten” [45]. Understanding the determinants of system use is therefore a cornerstone of IS research [21].
To perform our analysis we used a Partial Least Squares and Structural Equation Modeling tool (PLS-GRAPH Version 3.00 build 279). SEM allows researchers to simultaneously examine the structural component (path model) and measurement component (factor model) in the one model.We performed our validation by constructing two PLS models, one for each application. The internal consistency (reliability) statistics for all constructs in both models were above 0.96. This exceeded the 0.7 rule-of-thumb [26] C. Fornell and D. Larcker, Evaluating structural equation models with unobservable variables and measurement error, Journal of Marketing Research 18 (1981), pp. 39–50. Full Text via CrossRef[26] and confirmed the scales’ reliability. We tested convergent validity by examining whether all items loaded highly on their respective construct in PLS. A common rule-of-thumb is a loading greater than 0.7 [63]. In the email and word processor models, all items loaded on their constructs from 0.87 to 0.96, indicating convergent validity. To test discriminant validity, we tested the item-to-total correlations for each system. As shown in Table 3 and Table 4, the items loaded cleanly on each construct, indicating good discriminant validity.
Directors
Dan Cohen
Sean Takats
Development
Dan Stillman, Lead Developer
Simon Kornblith, Senior Developer
Frederick Gibbs, Developer
Integration
Jon Lesser, User Experience Designer
Trevor Owens, Community Lead
Raymond Yee, Integration Advisor
Guidance
Elena Razlogova
Alumni
Michael Berkowitz
Jeremy Boggs
Kari Kraus
Josh Greenberg
Shekhar Krishnan
Asa Kusuma
David Norton
Ben Parr
Roy Rosenzweig
Connie Moon Sehat
Ramesh Srigiriraju
Zotero is the brainchild of a team of digital historians at the Center for History and New Media at George Mason University: Dan Cohen, Josh Greenberg, Simon Kornblith, David Norton and Dan Stillman. Their basic goal was to create a freely available, open source tool that would put the essential functions of standalone bibliography software like Endnote into the Firefox browser. Since we already spend most of the day reading and writing in our browsers (e-mail, blogging, newsfeeds, online journals, e-books, library catalogs, etc.) this makes a lot of sense. Like commercially available packages, Zotero allows you to create and cite from a database of primary and secondary references of various types (books, newspaper articles, journal articles, and so on). Instead of starting a separate program, however, you can enter records as you browse library catalogs (e.g., Library of Congress, WorldCat), bookstores (Amazon.com) and many other websites.