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Department Business and Economics

TIE Institute at ICIS 2025: Research Contributions and Conference Highlights

TIE researchers at the ICIS 2025 © TIE Institute
With four full papers and two short papers, the TIE Institute made a visible contribution to ICIS’25 in Nashville, including nominations for the Best Short Paper Award and the Best Full Paper Award.

Last week, our TIE Institute was represented by a team of six researchers at ICIS 2025 in Nashville, one of the leading international conferences in information systems research. As part of the program, the Institute presented four full papers and two short papers. In addition, one paper was nominated for the Best Short Paper Award and another for the Best Full Paper Award. The conference offered numerous opportunities for academic exchange with the international research community, particularly on topics related to generative AI and digital platforms.

Beyond the scientific program, the host city of Nashville also provided insights into local culture.

The TIE Institute’s contributions to ICIS 2025 are available here (links behind the titles):

• Celina Brils, Julie Saesen, Steffen Strese (Best Short Paper Award nominee) — “The Role of GenAI Conversation Style in Satisfaction and Competence Perceptions” https://aisel.aisnet.org/icis2025/gen_ai/gen_ai/1/

• Raphael Felbermayer, Julie Saesen, Bastian Kindermann, Steffen Strese (Short paper) — “Temporary Social Gatherings of Complementors and Crowd Involvement” https://aisel.aisnet.org/icis2025/sharing_econ/sharing_econ/3/

• Clarissa Knorr, Bastian Kindermann (Full paper) — “How Does (AI-)Complement Configuration Affect User Value in Platform Ecosystems? A Qualitative Comparative Analysis” https://aisel.aisnet.org/icis2025/sharing_econ/sharing_econ/1/

• Gabriel Bliß, Tessa Flatten (Full paper) — “Trusting Generative AI-based Conversational Agents: The Role of Anthropomorphism and Transparency as Trust Signals” https://aisel.aisnet.org/icis2025/gen_ai/gen_ai/20/

• Larissa Pomrehn (Full paper) — “The Role of Neurodiversity and Level of Interaction in Shaping Perceptions of Algorithmic Decision-Making” https://aisel.aisnet.org/icis2025/is_transformwork/is_transformwork/3/

• Frédéric Tronnier, Larissa Pomrehn, Rinusan Navakumaran (Full paper) — “Motivated or Overwhelmed? A Qualitative Study on Technostress in Generative Artificial Intelligence Use” https://aisel.aisnet.org/icis2025/is_transformwork/is_transformwork/1/

We thank all co-authors, the conference organizers, and all participants for the valuable academic exchange. Congratulations to all presenters who contributed to making ICIS 2025 a successful and intellectually strong event.