Refine
Year of publication
- 2021 (43) (remove)
Document Type
- Conference Proceeding (43) (remove)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (43)
Keywords
- MOOC (2)
- higher education (2)
- semiconductors (2)
- Alpha-amylase (1)
- Browser Platform (1)
- COVID-19 (1)
- Convergent thinking (1)
- Creative process (1)
- Discontinued Features (1)
- Drama (1)
- ERP (1)
- Emerging Topics in Digital Government (1)
- Enterprise Resource Planning (1)
- Enterprise System (1)
- Feature Removal (1)
- Heart Rate (1)
- Hebbel (1)
- Holocaust (1)
- Huguenots (1)
- Interoception (1)
- Lean Core (1)
- Migration (1)
- Modeling (1)
- Mozilla Firefox (1)
- Mythos (1)
- Nazi Germany (1)
- Neurostimulation (1)
- Platform Innovation (1)
- Pockets of creativity (1)
- Pooled Data (1)
- Problems (1)
- Protestantismus (1)
- Prusse (1)
- Requirements (1)
- Research Agenda (1)
- Russian History (1)
- Salivary (1)
- Second World War (1)
- Software Platforms (1)
- Soviet History (1)
- Three-tier Architecture (1)
- Tragödie (1)
- Trait Anxiety (1)
- Transcutaneous Auricular Vagus Nerve Stimulation (1)
- US Intensity (1)
- US Work-up (1)
- age-appropriate competence development (1)
- blockchain (1)
- case study (1)
- creativity (1)
- culture, identity, and inclusion (1)
- data security (1)
- deep reinforcement learning (1)
- demographic change (1)
- digital education (1)
- digital learning (1)
- e-learning (1)
- eference Architecture Model (1)
- electromagnetic (1)
- empowerment (1)
- evaluation (1)
- experience (1)
- group-subgroup relations (1)
- halide perovskites (1)
- hallow offshore (1)
- historie intellecturelle (1)
- historie sociale (1)
- ict (1)
- influence mapping (1)
- information flow control (1)
- information gateway (1)
- knowledge management (1)
- learning environment (1)
- learning factory (1)
- machine learning (1)
- microcredential (1)
- minorites (1)
- modelling (1)
- multi-frequency (1)
- new product development (1)
- nitride materials (1)
- online course (1)
- online course creation (1)
- online course design (1)
- platform acceptance (1)
- power relations (1)
- prediction (1)
- production control (1)
- production planning (1)
- refugees (1)
- social inclusion (1)
- stakeholder analysis (1)
- structure-property relationships (1)
- subject differences (1)
- systematic literature review (1)
- technology (1)
- twinning (1)
- virtual learning (1)
- visualization (1)
- vocational training (1)
Institute
- Fachgruppe Betriebswirtschaftslehre (16)
- Institut für Biochemie und Biologie (6)
- Institut für Ernährungswissenschaft (4)
- Department Psychologie (3)
- Institut für Chemie (3)
- Wirtschafts- und Sozialwissenschaftliche Fakultät (3)
- Historisches Institut (2)
- Fakultät für Gesundheitswissenschaften (1)
- Hasso-Plattner-Institut für Digital Engineering GmbH (1)
- Institut für Geowissenschaften (1)
The usage of data to improve or create business models has become vital for companies in the 21st century. However, to extract value from data it is important to understand the business model. Taxonomies for data-driven business models (DDBM) aim to provide guidance for the development and ideation of new business models relying on data. In IS research, however, different taxonomies have emerged in recent years, partly redundant, partly contradictory. Thus, there is a need to synthesize the common ground of these taxonomies within IS research. Based on 26 IS-related taxonomies and 30 cases, we derive and define 14 generic building blocks of DDBM to develop a consolidated taxonomy that represents the current state-of-the-art. Thus, we integrate existing research on DDBM and provide avenues for further exploration of data-induced potentials for business models as well as for the development and analysis of general or industry-specific DDBM.
Power relations within the area of blockchain governance are complex by definition and a comprehensive analysis that links technological and institutional elements is missing to date. The research that is presented with this article focuses on the visualization of the shifting power relations with the introduction of blockchain. For this purpose, the analysis leverages an adjusted version of the multi-stakeholder influence mapping tool. The analysis considers the various stakeholders within the multi-layered blockchain technology stack and compares three fundamental blockchain scenarios, including public and private blockchain settings. The findings show that public administrations face indeed less power with the introduction of blockchain, while new stakeholders come into play who wield influence rather uncontrolled. Nonetheless, public administrations are not powerless overall and remain influential stakeholders. This paper concludes that blockchain governance is not as democratic as blockchain enthusiasts tend to argue and derives corresponding opportunities for further research.
As a central functionality of SNSs, the newsfeed is responsible for the way, how content is presented. This paper investigates the implications of current content presentation on Facebook, which has appeared to be a matter of users’ criticism. Leaning on the communication theory, we conceptualize clutter on a newsfeed as noise that hinders the receiver’s adequate message decoding (i.e., sensemaking). We further operationalize newsfeed clutter via perceived disorder, information overload, and system feature overload. Our participants browsed their Facebook newsfeed for at least 5 minutes. The follow-up survey results provide partial support for our hypotheses, with only perceived disorder significantly associated with lower sensemaking. These findings shed new light on user experience and underpin the importance of SNSs as communication systems, adding to the existent literature on the dark sides of social media.
The holocaust in the USSR
(2021)
This paper sketches the current status of international scholarship on the subject of the Holocaust in the USSR and its place in the wider military conflict of the Second World War. Research on this topic over the last 20 to 30 years has been truly international and the findings of this research cannot be sketched here without pointing to the contributions made by German, American, Russian, Israeli, British and Australian historians. Historians from these countries have made important contributions to our understanding of key questions relating to this subject. These questions address, among other things, pre-invasion orders issued to German units; the radicalisation of German policy, culminating in the root-and-branch extermination of Soviet Jewry; the network of ghettos set up on Soviet territory; the nature of the killing and the methods used to murder these victims; the total death toll of the Holocaust in the USSR; and the relationship between war and extermination, in which genocide can be regarded as an actual strategy of warfare pursued by the German Reich.
Halide perovskites
(2021)
The devil in disguise
(2021)
Envy constitutes a serious issue on Social Networking Sites (SNSs), as this painful emotion can severely diminish individuals' well-being. With prior research mainly focusing on the affective consequences of envy in the SNS context, its behavioral consequences remain puzzling. While negative interactions among SNS users are an alarming issue, it remains unclear to which extent the harmful emotion of malicious envy contributes to these toxic dynamics. This study constitutes a first step in understanding malicious envy’s causal impact on negative interactions within the SNS sphere. Within an online experiment, we experimentally induce malicious envy and measure its immediate impact on users’ negative behavior towards other users. Our findings show that malicious envy seems to be an essential factor fueling negativity among SNS users and further illustrate that this effect is especially pronounced when users are provided an objective factor to mask their envy and justify their norm-violating negative behavior.