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MIT Center for Information Systems Research

Coordinates: 42°21′49″N 71°04′45″W / 42.363518°N 71.079037°W / 42.363518; -71.079037
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
MIT Center for Information Systems Research
AbbreviationCISR
Formation1974
TypeResearch center
Location
Director
Stephanie Woerner
Websitecisr.mit.edu

The MIT Center for Information Systems Research (CISR) is a research center at the MIT Sloan School of Management founded in 1974. MIT CISR's research focuses on the use of information technology and management in complex organizations. Its mission is to "develop concepts and frameworks to help executives address the IT-related challenges of leading increasingly dynamic, global, and information-intensive organizations."[1]

The Center for Information Systems Research has done groundbreaking research in the areas of managerial computing, executive support systems, critical success factors, IT governance, IT portfolio management, operating model, and enterprise architecture.[2][3]

History

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The Center for Information Systems Research (CISR) was established in 1974 by the MIT Alfred P. Sloan School of Management. Its initial mission was described as: To conduct research on the effective use of computer-based information systems, and in particular concern itself with helping managers deal with questions of information system effectiveness.[4] Among its first scientists were John F. Rockart, Norman Rasmussen, Peter Chen, John J. Donovan, Stuart Madnick, Henry D. Jacoby, Peter G.W. Keen, Charles B. Stabell, Steve Alter and Michael J. Ginzberg.[4]

Over the years the Center for Information Systems Research has published a series of about 400 working papers, and has held many seminars and conferences. Together with other early IT research centers, such as the Management Information Systems Research Center at Minnesota (established in 1968), they helped to shape the young information systems discipline.[5]

Professor Michael Scott Morton was the first director, from 1974 to 1976. The first long standing director of the Center for Information Systems Research was John F. Rockart, who managed the center from 1976 to 2000. He was succeeded by Peter Weill, who was succeeded in 2008 byJeanne W. Ross. Stephanie Woerner has been director since 2022 and Peter Weill is currently the chairman of MIT CISR.

Other researchers and (former) faculty members associated with the Center for Information Systems Research are John F. Rockart, Dale L. Goodhue, Stuart Madnick, JoAnne Yates, Wanda Orlikowski, Peter Weill, Jeanne W. Ross, and Cynthia Beath.

Selected publications

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Working papers, a selection:

Other publications:

  • Rockart, John F., and Christine V. Bullen. The rise of managerial computing: the best of the Center for Information Systems Research. Dow Jones-Irwin, 1986.

References

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  1. ^ Center for Information Systems Research: Our mission Archived 2013-11-26 at the Wayback Machine, 2013.
  2. ^ Gardner, Dana. "Enterprise Architecture and Transformation at the Crossroads". E-Commerce News. ECT News Network, Inc. Retrieved 11 April 2012.
  3. ^ Zaino, Jennifer. "MIT's Jeanne Ross On Bringing Psych Skills To Enterprise Architecture". Smart Enterprise Exchange. UBM TechWeb. Retrieved 11 April 2012.
  4. ^ a b Alfred P. Sloan School of Management, Center for Information Systems Research (1974) Statement of Purpose, Structure and Research Goals. REPORT CISR-1. SLOAN WP 749-74, November 1, 1974
  5. ^ Ives, Blake, Margrethe H. Olson, and Ron Weber. "Guest editorial: a valued institution builder: Gordon B. Davis." MIS Quarterly 29.3 (2005): v-xiii.
  6. ^ Republished as: Keen, Peter GW. "Information systems and organizational change." Communications of the ACM 24.1 (1981): 24-33.
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42°21′49″N 71°04′45″W / 42.363518°N 71.079037°W / 42.363518; -71.079037