Reconceptualizing users: The roles and activities of people as they engage with digital technologies

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Abstract

The concept of the user has persisted in information systems research and practice since the field’s inception in the 1950s. However, the roles that people play and the activities they perform have changed considerably over time. People now engage with digital technologies for all kinds of activities and in all kinds of ways, including for both personal and professional purposes. Hence, the purpose of this paper is to reconceptualize the term “user.” We discuss the various activities that people engage in with digital technologies, the myriad roles they play, and an essential shift in what the term “user” means. Users might be active in shaping how a particular information system is used, they might be partners with an information system, they might be used by an information system, and they may spend sizable parts of their lives living essentially within information systems. We conclude by discussing the implications for the IS discipline of reconceptualizing the term “user.”

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APA

Baskerville, R. L., & Myers, M. D. (2023). Reconceptualizing users: The roles and activities of people as they engage with digital technologies. Journal of Information Technology, 38(4), 487–501. https://doi.org/10.1177/02683962231183455

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