An integrative semiotic methodology for IS research (original) (raw)

Abstract

Semiotics studies the production, transmission and interpretation of meaning represented symbolically in signs and messages primarily, but not exclusively, in language. For information systems (IS) the domain of semiosis consists of human and non-human interactions based on technologically-mediated communication in the social, material and personal worlds. The paper argues that semiosis has immense bearing on processes of communication central to the advanced information and communications technologies studied by IS scholars. Its use separately, or in mixed methods approaches, enriches areas of central concern to the IS field, and is particularly apt when researching internet-based development and applications, for example virtual worlds and social media. This paper provides a four step structured methodology, informed by a central theoretical semiotic framework to provide practical guidelines for operationalizing semiotics in IS research. Thus, using illustrative examples, the paper provides a step-bystep semiotics approach to research based on distinctive semiotic concepts and their relationshipsproducer, consumer, medium, code, message and content-and how, at an integrating level, the personal, social and material worlds relate through sociation, embodiment and sociomateriality.

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References (1)

  1. We are using the term "sociomateriality" differently from the usual sense as discussed in (Mingers and Willcocks 2014). We conceptualise the social and the material as intimately related but ultimately separable systems. xix Kress and van Leewen {, 1996 #4161} have developed a form of visual grammar in their book Reading Images. On website moving images, Metz {, 1986 #4192} has developed a semiotic theory of types of film shot -and details eight different syntagms that can be chosen in the making of a film.