R. M. Burton and B. Obel, “Computational modeling for what-is, what-might-be,and what-should-be studies—and triangulation,” Organization science, vol. 22, iss. 5, p. 1195–1202, 2011.
Abstract
In this essay, we examine what-is, what-might-be, and what-should-be computational models where the purpose is to explore new concepts, ideas, boundaries, and limitations going beyond what we know at the moment. Computational models complement well with other approaches: ethnographies, field studies, human subject lab studies, and surveys in novel triangulations. Triangulation of two or more complementary approaches permits us to broaden and deepen our understanding and insights.
BibTeX
@article {2c094a00f26111df8ec7000ea68e967b,
number = {5},
publisher = {INFORMS},
issn = {1047-7039},
journal = {Organization Science},
pages = {1195--1202},
volume = {22},
language = {English},
doi = {10.1287/orsc.1100.0635},
year = {2011},
abstract = {In this essay, we examine what-is, what-might-be, and what-should-be computational models where the purpose is to explore new concepts, ideas, boundaries, and limitations going beyond what we know at the moment. Computational models complement well with other approaches: ethnographies, field studies, human subject lab studies, and surveys in novel triangulations. Triangulation of two or more complementary approaches permits us to broaden and deepen our understanding and insights.},
title = {Computational Modeling for What-Is, What-Might-Be,and What-Should-Be Studies—And Triangulation},
updated = {2011-12-01T08:00:00-06:00},
biburl = {https://zeal.dk/publications/computational-modeling-for-what-is-what-might-be-and-what-should-be-studies-and-triangulation/},
biburl_fo = {https://zeal.fo/utgavur/computational-modeling-for-what-is-what-might-be-and-what-should-be-studies-and-triangulation/},
urltitle = {computational-modeling-for-what-is-what-might-be-and-what-should-be-studies-and-triangulation},
author = {Burton, Richard M and Obel, Børge}
}