An assessment of group support systems experimental research: Methodology and results
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-1998
Abstract
By mid-1998, approximately 200 different controlled experiments had been published in 230 articles in refereed journals or major conference proceedings, which examined processes and outcomes in computer-supported group decision making. This paper is a concise overview of what has been studied and how: the systems, independent, intervening, adaptation, and dependent variables, manipulated or measured, and experimental procedures employed. Part I categorizes the contextual and intervening factors. Part II analyzes 1,582 hypotheses resulting from pairings of independent and dependent variables. The results show that the modal outcome for GSS systems compared with face-to-face (FtF) methods is "no difference," while the overall percentage of positive effects for hypotheses that compare GSS with FtF is a disappointing 16.6 percent. Experiments with seven to ten groups per treatment condition working on idea-generation tasks and using GSS technology show an improvement up to 29.0 percent. These resul ts are moderated by technology, process structure, communication mode, group factors, task type, the number of experimental groups per treatment condition, and the type of dependent variable measured. The purpose of this paper is to aid the GSS researcher by presenting detailed results of what has been studied and found in previous experiments, along with a discussion of what needs to be studied.
Identifier
0032223737 (Scopus)
Publication Title
Journal of Management Information Systems
External Full Text Location
https://doi.org/10.1080/07421222.1998.11518216
ISSN
07421222
First Page
7
Last Page
149
Issue
3
Volume
15
Recommended Citation
Fjermestad, Jerry and Hiltz, Starr Roxanne, "An assessment of group support systems experimental research: Methodology and results" (1998). Faculty Publications. 16590.
https://digitalcommons.njit.edu/fac_pubs/16590
