Management and office information systems
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Bibliographic Information
Management and office information systems
(Management and information systems)
Plenum, c1984
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Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Decision making is a very complex phenomenon. Modern decision makers must deal with very complex problems which are constantly changing and often ill structured, making modeling and analysis difficult. In order to provide support for the decision makers, computer-based information systems are designed to collect, store, process, and transport information. Recent advances in computer technol ogy, data communications, database systems, office automation, and knowledge engineering have made possible the design of very sophisticated information sys tems. However, rapid technological advances also create many problems, not the least of which is the lack of integration among the various disciplines in infor mation system design. Without such integration, a costly computer-based infor mation system is at best partially useful and at worst totally useless. The aim of this book, therefore, is to examine the various issues involved in designing man agement information systems, decision support systems, and office information systems for increasing productivity and providing decision support. This book is the outcome of the Workshop on Management and Office Infor mation Systems, which was organized by the Knowledge Systems Institute and held at Chicago, Illinois, from June 28 to 30, 1982. Twenty-seven papers from the working papers presented at that workshop were selected for inclusion in the present volume, which is organized into five parts: (I) organization structures and management, (II) decision support systems, (III) database systems, (IV) office information systems, and (V) systems and applications.
Table of Contents
I Organization Structures and Management.- 1. The Process of Designing Organization Structures and Their Information Substructures.- 2. Organizational Structures as the Primal Information System: An Interpretation.- 3. Analysis of Formal and Informal Information Needs in Decision Support Systems Design.- 4. Informational Needs of Organizations Under Crisis.- II Decision Support Systems.- 5. Languages for Decision Support Systems: An Overview.- 6. A Formal Approach to Decision Support.- 7. Decision Support in Enterprise Analysis.- 8. Planning and Control Systems for R&D Organizations.- 9. Decision Support Systems Information Needs Analysis through a Management Process Framework.- 10. The Organizational Dimensions of Management Information Systems Implementation: Case Studies in Singapore and Indonesia.- III Database Systems.- 11. Database Design for Decision Support Systems.- 12. Toward an Enterprise Information System Design Methodology.- 13. Language Design for Relational Model Management.- 14. Functional Augmentation of Relational Operations in Ares.- 15. Similarity Retrieval for Pictorial Databases.- IV Office Information Systems.- 16. Office Information System Design.- 17. Database Triggers and Alerters in an Automated Library Circulation System.- 18. Design and Implementation of a Library Automation System.- 19. An Experimental System for Office Procedure Automation.- 20. Petri Nets and their Application: An Introduction.- 21. Macros: An Office Application Generator.- V Systems and Applications.- 22. An Information System Approach to the Analysis of Job Design.- 23. Command Decomposition as a Decision-Making Problem.- 24. Matrix Operations Using Linpack: An Overview.- 25. The Corporate Provisioning Plan: A Systems Approach.- 26. A Grants Management System for CostAccounting: The Case of New York City.- 27. Reliability and Maintainability Management.
by "Nielsen BookData"