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MWAIS 2019 MAY 21-22, 2019 14TH ANNUAL MIDWEST UNITED STATES ASSOCIATION FOR INFORMATION SYSTEMS CONFERENCE UWOSH.EDU/MWAIS MBA Program

MWAIS2019 - University of Wisconsin–Oshkosh · 2019-05-10 · behind growth in the IT sector both through the supply of labor and fueling entrepreneurial activity. UW Oshkosh offers

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Page 1: MWAIS2019 - University of Wisconsin–Oshkosh · 2019-05-10 · behind growth in the IT sector both through the supply of labor and fueling entrepreneurial activity. UW Oshkosh offers

#MWAIS2019 | 1

MWAIS2019MAY 21-22, 2019 14TH ANNUAL MIDWEST UNITED STATES ASSOCIATION FOR INFORMATION SYSTEMS CONFERENCE

U W O S H . E D U / M W A I S

MBA Program

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On behalf of the MWAIS leadership team, I welcome you to the 14th Annual Midwest Association for Information Systems Conference. Our theme for this year is “Inclusiveness in the IT Talent Management Pipeline.” We are fortunate to have Dr. Eileen Trauth as our Keynote speaker and her presentation is entitled, “The Mainstreaming of Social Inclusion in IS Research.” In addition to Dr. Trauth’s keynote presentation, a session entitled “Social Inclusion in IS” will continue the exploration of this timely topic.

In addition to exploring the topic of Social Inclusion, we have many diverse and interesting paper sessions, panel discussions and workshops. I’m certain you will find many topics you will find interesting and informative. Our conference has always been a good place to reconnect with friends, network with colleagues and students, find others with like interests; and the friendly atmosphere provides for a collegial environment. I hope you take advantage of these opportunities over the next two days.

I want to thank Dr. Don Heath, his program and conference chairs, and those who have assisted them in organizing this conference. They have invested a lot of time and effort in making this what is I’m sure going to be an excellent conference. On a personal note, I am excited to visit the EAA Aviation Museum.

I am also proud to announce that MWAIS has again been recognized by AIS as an Outstanding Community. This recognition is given to recognize AIS Communities that do an outstanding job of supporting the mission of AIS through the advancement of knowledge and the promotion of excellence in the practice and study of information systems.

I hope you all have a great conference this year.

Regards,Dave Larson

Home to many national and international IT companies, Oshkosh has cemented its reputation for technology innovation. Companies doing business here include Oracular IS, DealerSocket, Henry Schein, Accu-Com and PODO Integrative Technology, to name a few. With dense high-tech business clusters and resources that are attractive to innovative companies – including a strong education system and highly skilled workforce the city is well positioned for further growth in the IT sector. There is an existing and growing base of information-based technology firms in Oshkosh and the surrounding region. Oshkosh has a very strong higher education system that produces highly skilled talent to fill available positions. Access to a strong education system is a valuable resource for local IT firms and companies in need of IT talent.

The presence of the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh in our community and our region is a driving force behind growth in the IT sector both through the supply of labor and fueling entrepreneurial activity. UW Oshkosh offers information systems and computer science programs that are great resources for entrepreneurs and offers a pipeline of skilled employees for IT companies.

Rob KlemanSenior Vice President, Economic Development

CITY OF OSHKOSH

WISCONSINWELCOME MESSAGEFROM MWAIS PRESIDENT

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MESSAGE FROM THE CONFERENCE CHAIRS

On behalf of the Conference and Program committees, it is my pleasure to welcome you to the 14th annual Midwest Association for Information Systems conference hosted by the Information Systems Department and the College of Business at the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh. Welcome to our home.

The program chairs, Dr. Vijayan Sugumaran, chair of the Department of Decision and Information Science at Oakland University, and myself, Information Systems Dept., College of Business, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh have arranged an outstanding program which includes thirty-seven academic paper presentations, three workshops and several very timely panel discussions which should be of high interest to attendees. Thank you to all who have contributed their time, energy and research to making the conference a success. Special thanks to the program committee who reviewed the papers, members of the conference committee who helped coordinate the logistics of the conference, and to Carey Behnke, Associate Marketing Manager in the Communications and Marketing department at UW Oshkosh for helping put together this beautiful brochure.

On the opening night of the conference, the conference committee has arranged a social event which will take place at the Experimental Aircraft Association Museum in Oshkosh, a 50,000-square-foot facility with nearly 100 aircraft on display. This is a fun and exciting venue with something for everyone. Dinner will be served on the floor of the museum and docents will be available afterward to lead tours through the facility.

I also want to thank our sponsors for their generous support:Giga-level sponsor: Prospect Press, Mega-level sponsor: Mendix, Kilo-level sponsor: Oklahoma State University, Kilo-level sponsor: UW Oshkosh MBA program, Half-kilo sponsor: AIS SIG Ontology-Driven Intelligent Systems, the University of Nebraska Omaha for sponsoring this year’s award plaques and the MWAIS Executive Committee for sponsoring complimentary student registrations. The commitment by these sponsors to the academic research, discourse and scholarship in the Midwest region is greatly appreciated. Most of all, I would like to thank the presenters and attendees who have come together to make this 14th annual MWAIS conference a success.

Best regards,Don Heath

WHERE EXCELLENCE AND OPPORTUNITY MEETUW Oshkosh is part of the robust University of Wisconsin System—one of the largest systems of public higher education in the country. As a member of the System, UW Oshkosh provides students with state-wide resources and ensures top academic quality and accountability.

With a strong research focus and national ranking in sustainability, Titans demonstrate on a daily basis what students can do to change the world. UW Oshkosh offers nearly 200 majors, minors and emphases, in addition to 15 graduate programs and two doctoral programs. UW Oshkosh provides academic programs that meet 21st century needs, through nationally recognized general education curriculum that celebrates inclusive excellence, fuels imagination and champions critical thinking.

UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN OSHKOSH

3 | UW Oshkosh

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MWAIS EXECUTIVE BOARD

PresidentDave LarsonUniversity of Illinois at Springfield

President-ElectRyan Schuetzler University of Nebraska Omaha, Nebraska

Immediate Past-PresidentShana PonelisUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

TreasurerDon HeathUniversity of Wisconsin Oshkosh

SecretaryDavid BirosOklahoma State University

Membership and Publicity DirectorAnne PowellSouthern Illinois University-Edwardsville

At-Large DirectorGaurav BansalUniversity of Wisconsin-Green Bay

CONFERENCE CHAIRS

Don Heath Michael Eierman Jakob Iversen John Muraski Ivor Addo Michael PattonInformation Systems Department College of Business, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh PROGRAM CHAIRS

Don Heath, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh

Vijayan Sugumaran, Oakland University

PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Hani AldirawiUniversity of Illinois-Chicago

Brian AlmquistMacEwan University

Rakesh BabuEnvision Inc.

Gaurav BansalUniversity of Wisconsin-Green Bay

Connie BarberSouthern Illinois University Edwardsville

Ronald BeckettSwinburne University of Technology

Andrew BehrensDakota State University

James BoitDakota State University

Caleb BradberryRadford University

Darrell BurrellThe Florida Institute of Technology

Kevin CalliesDakota State University

Ozlem CosgunDakota State University Mohammad DadashzadehOakland University

Maurice DawsonIllinois Institute of Technology

Steve DunnUniversity of Wisconsin Oshkosh

Michael EiermanUniversity of Wisconsin Oshkosh

Lee FreemanUniversity of Michigan at Dearborn

Laurie GiddensSouthern Illinois University Edwardsville

Bryan HosackThe Metro Health System

Jakob IversenUniversity of Wisconsin Oshkosh

Tim JacksSouthern Illinois University Edwardsville

Mehruz KamalThe College at Brockport, State University of New York

Kevin LumbardUniversity of Nebraska at Omaha

Mohammad MerhiIndiana University South Bend

Jeffrey MerhoutMiami University

John MuraskiUniversity of Wisconsin Oshkosh Saeed Reza Ramezanpour NargesiUniversity of Texas at Arlington

Calvin NoblesUniversity of Maryland University College

Cherie NoteboomDakota State University

Arnold NzailuDakota State University

Ray ParthUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Anne PowellSouthern Illinois University Edwardsville

Daniel PowerUniversity of Northern Iowa

Pam RowlandDakota State University

Kevin ScheibeIowa State University

Ryan SchuetzlerUniversity of Nebraska-Omaha

Tenace SetorUniversity of Nebraska-Omaha

Aise SevkliDenison University

Forough Nasirpouri ShadbadOklahoma State University

Madhav SharmaOklahoma State University Soo Il ShinUniversity of Wisconsin-Green Bay

Marwin ShraidehTechnical University of Munich

Saeed TabarBall State University

Cindy Zhiling TuNorthwest Missouri State University

Andreas VassilakosIllinois Institute of Technology

Joseph VithayathilSouthern Illinois University Edwardsville

Piyush VyasDakota State University

Christine WaniaThe College at Brockport, State University of New York

Jacob YoungBradley University

Gary Yu ZhaoNorthwest Missouri State University

One of the greatest strengths of the Information Systems (IS) program at UW Oshkosh is the high degree of one-on-one engagement between students and faculty. The IS faculty is highly knowledgeable and focused on teaching skills that are relevant to practice. The department maintains a close connection with local and regional employers looking to hire Oshkosh graduates. This close connection with industry helps inform classroom instruction. The IS major is available to students fully admitted into the College of Business.

The bachelor of business administratio in Information Systems (IS) prepares students to create, deploy and manage information systems to integrate all aspects of a business. Coursework includes programming, systems analysis and design, database, networking, and electives such as mobile application development. Students can develop specialized skills based on their career interests by choosing among several emphases–including ERP, web and mobile development .

INFORMATION SYSTEMS

UWOSH.EDU/COB/ IS

College of Business

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Eileen Trauth, Ph.D.Professor EmeritusInformation Sciences & TechnologyGender, Women’s & Sexuality StudiesThe Pennsylvania State [email protected] | www.eileentrauth.com

The Mainstreaming of Social Inclusion in IS Research

Social inclusion in information is a research topic whose time has come. A generation of researchers and practitioners have researched the possibilities of, and produced systems for the digital society. It is now time to seriously consider the issues that have arisen alongside all of our profession’s accomplishments: a workforce that does not reflect the characteristics of our population, technology and systems that do not reflect the needs and interests of all of their users, and systems that reveal often unintended, negative consequences for groups of people in our society. While some IS researchers have been conducting research for over 20 years about barriers to marginalized people in the IS field, about digital exclusion, and about the dark side of IS, this work has generally been considered on the margins of “core” IS research. And these themes have not been among the “core skills” of IS practitioners. That is now beginning to change as social inclusion becomes more embedded into IS research and practice. Dr. Trauth explains what social inclusion research and practice has meant and then makes the case for what it should mean in the IS profession going forward.

• GIGA LEVEL SPONSOR •

KEYNOTE SPEAKER

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DAY 1 (MAY 21)

PRE-CONFERENCE (MAY 20)

7:15–8:45 a.m. Shuttle Conference hotel to venue

7:30–8:30 a.m. Great Hall Continental breakfast

8 a.m.–5 p.m. Great Hall Sponsor Exhibits

8:30–8:45 a.m. Ballroom B & C Conference kick-off and welcome

8:45–9:45 a.m. Ballroom B & C Keynote address: The Mainstreaming of Social Inclusion in IS Research, by Dr. Eileen Trauth

9:45–10 a.m. Great Hall Morning break

 

10–10:50 a.m. Ballroom B & C Panel Discussion: When Programs Collide – A Panel Discussion on the Competing Interests of Analytics and Security:

• Jacob Young, Bradley University• David Biros, Oklahoma State University• Ryan Schuetzler, University of Nebraska Omaha• Tyler Smith, Bradley University• Paul Stephens, Bradley University• Rhonda Syler, University of Arkansas• Shawn Zheng, Bradley University

Room 201 Healthcare Innovation• Gamification of Medical Information in the Waiting

Room; Deepak Bagel, Patrick Murphy, Christopher Pitre, Yongzhao Xu and Nathan Twyman

• Does Organizational Innovation Capability Impact Electronic Medical Records Implementation Success?; Rangarajan Parthasarathy, James R. Knight and David K. Wyant

• How Can Health Technology Project Communications be Improved in a Hospital; Andrew Behrens, Cherie Noteboom and Dave Bishop

SESSION 1 (CONCURRENT TRACKS)

Pre-Conference Welcome Reception Sage Hall | 835 High Ave. Oshkosh, WI 549015–7 p.m. in the main lobby

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2:50-3:40 p.m. Ballroom B & C

Workshop: Building Collaboration Networks to solve the IT Talent Pipeline Shortage: Where are the Women?;

• John Muraski, UW Oshkosh• Jakob Iversen, UW Oshkosh• Kimberly Iversen, Director of New IT Alliance

Room 201

Room 201

IS Innovation• Blockchain – a Solution to Age-old Problems: Overview, Case

Examples & Research Ideas; Dana Schwartz and Jeffrey Merhout• Decision Support for Data Virtualization based on Fifteen Critical

Success Factors: A Methodology; Marwin Shraideh, Matthias Gottlieb, Isabel Fuhrmann, Harald Kienegger, Markus Böhm and Helmut Krcmar

• Trust and Control: A Threat to the Future of Autonomous Vehicle; Brandon Jones, Emmanuella Muamba, Matthew Vance, Benjamin Saake and Nathan Twyman

Cybersecurity in Theory and Practice• Developing an Unintentional Information Security Misbehavior

Scale (UISMS), Forough Nasirpouri Shadbad and David Biros• A Review of Information Systems Security Management:

An Integrated Framework, Cindy Zhiling Tu, Joni Adkins and Gary Yu Zhao

• Trust Violation and Rebuilding After a Data Breach: Role of Environmental Stewardship and Underlying Motives; Gaurav Bansal and Noah Redfearn

Great Hall Afternoon break

4–4:50 p.m. Ballroom B & C

Social Inclusion in IS: • Introduction by Adrienne Hartman on behalf of Women in IT• Developing more women in managerial roles in information

technology and cybersecurity; Darrell Norman Burrell• Factors Impacting Seniors’ Usage of Technology; Mohammad Merhi

and Hani Aldirawi• Investigating ICTs for Education in Marginalized Communities;

Mehruz Kamal and Diksha Diksha

Room 201 Meeting: JMWAIS Editorial Board

4:45-5:30 p.m. Shuttle Alumni Center to Conference Hotel

5:30–6 p.m. Shuttle Conference Hotel to Social Event @ EAA

6–9 p.m. Off campus Social Event: EAA Aviation Museum3000 Poberezny Rd, Oshkosh, WI 54902Dinner starting at 6:15Docent tours beginning at 6:45

8–9 p.m. Shuttle Social Event to Conference Hotel

SESSION 4 (CONCURRENT TRACKS)

SESSION 5 (CONCURRENT TRACKS)

 

11–11:50 a.m. Room 209 Workshop: Improving Online Teaching with Technology by Implementing Instructional Design Best Practices:

• Amy Rutledge, Oakland University• Shaun Moore, Oakland University

Room 201 Data Analysis / Analytics• Comparison of Data Mining and Mathematical Models for Estimating

Fuel Consumption of Passenger Vehicles; Mehmet Sevkli, Aise Zulal Sevkli and Ozlem Cosgun

• Towards Crime Prevention Using Big Data Analytics: A Literature Review with an Explorative Case Study; Andreas Vassilakos, Matthias Gottlieb and Maurice Dawson

• The Impact of Analytics in Professional Baseball: How Long Before Performance Improves; Lee Freeman

Room 213 Behavioral Issues in Cybersecurity • Establishing Human Factors Programs to Mitigate Blind Spots

in Cybersecurity; Calvin Nobles• Adolescent Girls’ Influencers in Cybersecurity Education

and Activities; Pam Rowland and Cherie Noteboom• Extrinsic Factors influencing the Effective Use of Security

Awareness Guidelines: A Comparative study between a Bank and a Telecommunication Company; Arnold Nzailu and James Boit

12–1p.m. Ballroom B & C

Lunch: sponsored by Prospect Press• Prospect Press: Thank you to authors and adopters• MWAIS board meeting• Presentation: MWAIS 2020

 

1:10–2:40 p.m. Ballroom B & C

CIO Panel Discussion: The Need for an Ethical Framework that Governs Core Values and Principles for the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Big Data in Enterprises:

• Murali Balakrishnan, CIO, TIDI Products• Gaurav Bansal, UW Green Bay• David Cagigal, CIO State of Wisconsin• Raman Mehta, CIO Visteon Corporation• Todd Thiel, VP of IT, Secura Insurance

Room 201 Data Visualization and HCI• How Does the Visualization of Data Change How it is Interpreted?;

Alexis Vanderwilt and Cherie Noteboom• Interactive Visualizations: A Literature Review, Kari Sandouka• Exploring Design Patterns as Evaluation Tools in Human Computer

Interaction Education; Christine Wania• Building Decision Adviser Bots; Daniel Power, Shashidhar Kaparthi

and Arti Mann

SESSION 2 (CONCURRENT TRACKS)

SESSION 3 (CONCURRENT TRACKS)

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10–10:50 a.m. Ballroom B & C

Workshop: Mendix workshop (continued)

Room 201 IS Theory and Practice• Modular and Collaborative Theorizing: A Move Away fromTheoretical

Superstars; Jeffrey Wall• “Something to talk about”, Exploring open source design spaces; Kevin

Lumbard, Vinod Ahuja, Matt Germonprez and Sean Goggin• Brief History of Midwest Association for Information Systems: 2005-2018;

Bryan Hosack and Kevin Scheibe

Room 209 Healthcare Information Technology• Building Trust in Healthcare IoT; Madhav Sharma and David Biros• A Conceptual Model of the Role of Relative Advantage, Compatibility

and Complexity in Electronic Medical Records Implementation Successs; Rangarajan Parthasarathy, Justin Kern and David K. Wyant

• What are Healthcare Providers’ Perceptions of Health Information Technology Project Training?; Andrew Behrens, Kaushik Ragothaman, David Bishop and Cherie Noteboom

11–11:50 a.m. Room 201 Cybersecurity Training and Education• Evaluating User Value and Confidence of Information Security for More

Effective Security Training; Ryan Wainz, Kristijana Arroyo, Chandle Camden and Blake Killough

• Identifying Major Flags in Phishing Emails; Eric Bush, Zachary Brake, Michelle Scheiffele and Darin Aranjo

• Employee Acceptance of Employer Control Over Personal Devices – Research in Progress; Kevin Callies, Cherie Noteboom, Daniel Talley and Yong Wang

12–1 p.m. Ballroom B & C

Box lunch and closing remarks

12:30-1:30 p.m. Shuttle Conference to Hotel

7:45–8:45 a.m. Shuttle Conference hotel to venue

8–9 a.m. Great Hall Continental Breakfast

9–9:50 a.m. Ballroom B & C

Workshop: Mendix workshop on innovative low-code tools for Systems Analysis and Design

Room 201 IS Training and Education• Work 4.0 and the Identification of Complex Competence Sets;

Ronald Beckett and Tanvria Daberkow• Innovations from academia around cybersecurity workforce and

faculty development; Darrell Norman Burrell• Scenarios for information and communication technology in

sub-Saharan African academic libraries: a research proposal; Shana Ponelis

Room 209 AI and Machine Learning• Predicting Stock Market Using Pattern Analysis and Machine Learning

Algorithms; Saeed Tabar, Sushil Sharma and David Volkman• Electronic Evidence and Technology-Assisted Review; Brian Almquist• Analysis of Twitter Data with #MeToo; Keerthi Bandarapally, Gowtham

Anand Kishore Reddy Chintapalli, Sree Praveen Madduru, Kamna Pal and Vincent Yu

DAY 2 (MAY 22)

SESSION 6 (CONCURRENT TRACKS)

SESSION 7 (CONCURRENT TRACKS)

SESSION 8 (CONCURRENT TRACKS)

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#MWAIS2019 | 16

TITAN WIFI ACCESSID: awccguest

Password: email address

Apps for all.No coding needed.Empower your students to build working solutions in the classroom

Attend the Workshop “Enable your students to build web and mobile apps in your classroom – no coding needed with Mendix!” and visit our booth at MWAIS 2019

Visit www.mendix.com/MWAIS19 for more information

Professors & students enjoy free Mendix technology, curriculum resources, training, support, and certifications

Mendix low-code platform is the fastest and easiest platform to create enterprise-grade web & mobile applications

Used by 4,000+ enterprise companies, Mendix is the recognized industry leader by Gartner and Forrester

• MEGA LEVEL SPONSOR •

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G E T S T A R T E D T O D AY ! [ CIST.UNOMAHA.EDU ]

With Undergraduate, Graduate, and Executive programs to choose from, we have a degree that’s right for you.

The Ph.D. in Business Administration from the Department of Management Science and Information Systems (MSIS) at Oklahoma State University provides intensive study in information technologies and prepares the student for significant professional contributions in university research and teaching. The MSIS Ph.D. program began in 2002. Since then, over 40 individuals have earned their doctoral degree.

We seek students with great potential and a desire and ability to produce high quality research in the field of Management Information Systems. Equally desirable is a passion to become a high quality teacher and mentor. While not required, it is desirable for students to have work experience at the managerial level.

Research Active Faculty• Scores of high quality journal and

conference publications since the department’s inception in 2003

• Many publications co-authored with current and former Ph.D. students

Research Support• Annual compensation of $20,000

(nine-month calendar) plus tuition and fee waivers

• University-paid medical insurance• Ph.D. students choose research area

provided faculty expertise is availableStillwater and OSU Perks• $75 million Business Building opened

in January 2018• Low cost of living and housingPlacement of Recent Graduates• Students typically placed at

comparable institutions following graduation

• Recent MSIS Ph.D. graduates employed at Louisiana State University, Illinois State University, Wright State University, Arkansas State University, the United States Air Force Academy and South Dakota State University

Application Information• February 1 is the application deadline

for first review• Master’s degree with GPA 3.5 or above

required• Minimum GMAT score of 600 or

minimum GRE score of 310 required

See https://business.okstate.edu/watson/msis-phd/application.html for additional information.

FOR INFORMATION CONTACT:David P. Biros, Ph.D. (Lt. Col. USAF, Retired)Associate Professor of Management Scienceand Information SystemsFleming Chair in IT ManagementOklahoma State [email protected]

Earn your Ph.D. in MSIS at Oklahoma State University

PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTSDEGREE OVERVIEW

SIGODIS

• HALF KILO LEVEL SPONSOR •

• HALF KILO LEVEL SPONSOR •

• KILO LEVEL SPONSOR •

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uwosh.edu/mba

16-MONTH COMPLETIONCOHORT | APPLETON

SATURDAY CLASSES

APPLETONOSHKOSH

ONLINE

• KILO LEVEL SPONSOR •