|
Showing 1 - 12 of
12 matches in All Departments
This book addresses the problem of designing sustainable canonical
action research (CAR) for studying aspects of the information
systems development cycle when well-established principles and
success criteria are difficult to meet. It covers the
methodological issues that arise when action research methods are
conducted, provides examples of action research in practice, and
summarises philosophical foundations of action research and its
application as a methodology in Information Systems research and
research programs.
This PhD thesis contributes to the theory of information
infrastructures by explaining how to use game theory and genetic
algorithms for turning the pseudo-code of the bootstrap algorithm
into proper code. The study is the first known study to analyse the
bootstrap algorithm from an action research perspective, and it has
become an important reference for further research on how to
bootstrap information infrastructures.
Living theory is a way of making use of personal accounts of
experienced practice. As the Pac-Man perspective on organisational
change helps the change agent articulate the personal values he is
committed to and how these values may be resisted in practice,
living theory is useful for developing knowledge that has a
practical impact on self-improvement and social change, but it is
also a type of theory that is difficult to publish in academic
outlets. As a consequence of this, publishing Pac-Man living-theory
research becomes a Pac-Man game in itself, with the journal editors
as one of the four adversary gatekeepers, but it is a rewarding
game for those who want to contribute both theoretically and
practically on how to make the world a better place.
It has been argued that the reason seventy percent of all IT
projects fail is due to lack of a formal system for guiding and
monitoring IT decisions. Organisations having explicit IT
governance systems are generally twice as successful as those with
poor governance, given the same strategic objectives, but
implementing IT governance can be difficult. In this book, Dr.
Ogland looks at the public sector and argues that the
implementation of IT governance has to be done through
bootstrapping. The bootstrap algorithm (BA) is a time-tested
approach that is known to work, but it is an approach that breaks
with much of the logic of the public sector bureaucracy and is
expected to be met with resistance. By analysing patterns in a
study of trying to convince a Norwegian public sector organisation
to implement IT governance through the use of the BA, the book is
able to provide rich insights on what causes failure and how to
make the implementation process succeed.
This PhD thesis contributes to the theory of information
infrastructures by explaining how to use game theory and genetic
algorithms for turning the pseudo-code of the bootstrap algorithm
into proper code. The study is the first known study to analyse the
bootstrap algorithm from an action research perspective, and it has
become an important reference for further research on how to
bootstrap information infrastructures.
'Using the Bootstrap Algorithm for Changing the Control Game' is
clearly written and points are supported by real life case studies.
Dr. Ogland demonstrates how a Total Quality Management strategy
articulated through the use of bootstrap algorithms can be used to
achieve world-class performance in challenging environments such as
complex organisations saturated with power struggles and internal
politics. The book features insights on critical systems thinking,
game theory, quality management systems, the Efqm Business
Excellence Model, self-assessment, and the implementation of Tqm.
Case studies provide practical insights from twenty years of
empirical research on how to bootstrap Tqm and Business Excellence
in complex environments. The ideas developed in the book have been
acknowledged as a major contribution to the theory of Tqm, and the
book itself is an indispensable resource for practitioners trying
to implement Tqm in environments where traditional implementation
methods are bound to fail.
This is an abstract yet practical guide to radar tracking and
Kalman filtering. The text is invaluable for engineers, scientists,
and mathematicians involved in tracking filter design. Its
straightforward approach makes it an excellent supplementary
textbook for senior-undergraduate and first-year graduate courses.
This volume represents an introduction to periodical B splines with
emphasis on the Oslo algorithm and reflection on applications
within the domain of Fourier analysis. Assuming only the elements
of linear algebra and analysis, Ogland presents just the necessary
Hilbert space theory and abstract functional analytic concepts
before developing the use of periodical splines as a fine
approximating tool. The work will be of benefit to engineers as
well as pure and applied mathematicians.
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
The Black Phone
Ethan Hawke, Jeremy Davies, …
DVD
R176
Discovery Miles 1 760
|