Journal: DATA BASE

Volume 44, Issue 4

11 -- 43Miguel I. Aguirre-Urreta, George M. Marakas, Michael E. Ellis. Measurement of composite reliability in research using partial least squares: some issues and an alternative approach
44 -- 55Roy D. Howell, Einar Breivik, James B. Wilcox. Formative measurement: a critical perspective
56 -- 65Andrew M. Hardin, Jerry Cha-Jan Chang. Does existing measurement theory support the use of composite and causal indicators in information systems research?
66 -- 79Ronald T. Cenfetelli, Geneviève Bassellier, Clay Posey. The analysis of formative measurement in IS research: choosing between component-and covariance-based techniques

Volume 44, Issue 3

8 -- 33Helen Kelley, Deborah Compeau, Christopher A. Higgins, Michael Parent. Advancing theory through the conceptualization and development of causal attributions for computer performance histories
34 -- 48Lakisha L. Simmons, Sumali J. Conlon. Extraction of financial information from online business reports
49 -- 67Keunho Choi, Gunwoo Kim, Yongmoo Suh. Classification model for detecting and managing credit loan fraud based on individual-level utility concept

Volume 44, Issue 2

7 -- 18Brian T. Pentland. Desperately seeking structures: grammars of action in information systems research
19 -- 38Darren Roback, Robin L. Wakefield. Privacy risk versus socialness in the decision to use mobile location-based applications
39 -- 54Cynthia M. LeRouge, Jack W. Wiley, Carl P. Maertz Jr.. A comparison of job satisfaction between it and non-IT women incumbents in clerical, professional, and managerial positions

Volume 44, Issue 1

9 -- 17E. Burton Swanson. Who learns what from the new human-computer interaction: enlarging the perspective
18 -- 55René Riedl. On the biology of technostress: literature review and research agenda
56 -- 77Nitish Singh, Ji Eun Park, Morris Kalliny. A framework to localize international business to business web sites
78 -- 101Francis Kofi Andoh-Baidoo, Kweku-Muata Osei-Bryson, Kwasi Amoako-Gyampah. A hybrid decision tree based methodology for event studies and its application to e-commerce initiative announcements