Search results for "Community model"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

On the Quest for Defining Organisational Plasticity: A Community Modelling Experiment

2020

PurposeThis viewpoint article is concerned with an attempt to advance organisational plasticity (OP) modelling concepts by using a novel community modelling framework (PhiloLab) from the social simulation community to drive the process of idea generation. In addition, the authors want to feed back their experience with PhiloLab as they believe that this way of idea generation could also be of interest to the wider evidence-based human resource management (EBHRM) community.Design/methodology/approachThe authors used some workshop sessions to brainstorm new conceptual ideas in a structured and efficient way with a multidisciplinary group of 14 (mainly academic) participants using PhiloLab. Th…

DisorganisationOrganisational behaviorOrganizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementPlasticityProcess (engineering)Computer scienceHD28 Management. Industrial Managementmedia_common.quotation_subjectQualitative property02 engineering and technologyPhiloLabMultidisciplinary approachBrainstormingOriginality0502 economics and business0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringSet (psychology)Social simulationmedia_commonManagement scienceAgent-based modelling Paper type -Viewpoint05 social sciencesCommunity modellingAgent-based modellingOrganisational behaviourHuman resource management020201 artificial intelligence & image processing050203 business & management
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Harnessing ICT to develop community and identity: a model for academic departments

2006

Universities have been early adopters of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT). However, does availability imply use? How is ICT being used by academic departments? This article addresses these questions, and discusses the use of ICT to support research, instruction and service, but more specifically, the use of ICT to enhance a sense of identity and community across all members of a department. The authors' observations of university departments across the Atlantic reveal very limited uses of ICT. A democratic web-based academic departmental community model is proposed to assist in the strengthening of departmental identity and community as well as advancing its mission. Concept…

Service (systems architecture)Knowledge managementComputer Networks and Communicationsbusiness.industryCommunity identityCommunicationmedia_common.quotation_subjectInformation technologyIdentity (social science)DemocracyEducationEarly adopterInformation and Communications TechnologyCommunity modelComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDSOCIETYSociologybusinessSoftwaremedia_commonInternational Journal of Web Based Communities
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