This paper describes a new collaboration technology that is based on the support of lightweight, informally structured, opportunistic activities featuring heterogeneous threads of shared items with dynamic membership. We introduce our design concepts, and we provide a detailed analysis of user behavior during a five month field study. We present the patterns of media use that we observed, using a variety of analytical methods including thread clustering and analysis. Major findings include four patterns of media use: communicating, exchanging mixed objects, coordinating, (e.g., of status reports), and semi-archival filing. We observed differential use of various media including highly variable use of chats and surprisingly informal uses of ...
This paper presents a cooperative work perspective on the role of computer artifacts in organisation...
Organizational processes today are marked by a growing fragmentation of knowledge and responsibiliti...
Interactivity remains a central and yet notoriously difficult notion in studies of computermediated ...
This paper describes a new collaboration technology that is based on the support of lightweight, inf...
As project teams have become dispersed and communication technology has evolved, organizations have ...
We present early findings from an ethnographic study of the information behaviors of nine groups wit...
This paper describes a study that examines the process of two groups using a combined collaboration ...
The focus of the study is on the generation and use of common information spaces, and how the comput...
This research examines communication among members of an academic research group, placing their info...
Patterns, repeatable processes for recurring high-value tasks, have great potential for assisting co...
Nowadays work is becoming predominantly distributed, bringing significant challenges to effective co...
In this paper, we present a preliminary field study aimed at investigating collaborative work activi...
Cooperative hypermedia means producting and manipulating hyperorganized multimedia data by a group o...
Studying the collaborative behavior of online learning teams and how this behavior is related to com...
Despite significant proliferation of Internet services in recent years, technology for computer-supp...
This paper presents a cooperative work perspective on the role of computer artifacts in organisation...
Organizational processes today are marked by a growing fragmentation of knowledge and responsibiliti...
Interactivity remains a central and yet notoriously difficult notion in studies of computermediated ...
This paper describes a new collaboration technology that is based on the support of lightweight, inf...
As project teams have become dispersed and communication technology has evolved, organizations have ...
We present early findings from an ethnographic study of the information behaviors of nine groups wit...
This paper describes a study that examines the process of two groups using a combined collaboration ...
The focus of the study is on the generation and use of common information spaces, and how the comput...
This research examines communication among members of an academic research group, placing their info...
Patterns, repeatable processes for recurring high-value tasks, have great potential for assisting co...
Nowadays work is becoming predominantly distributed, bringing significant challenges to effective co...
In this paper, we present a preliminary field study aimed at investigating collaborative work activi...
Cooperative hypermedia means producting and manipulating hyperorganized multimedia data by a group o...
Studying the collaborative behavior of online learning teams and how this behavior is related to com...
Despite significant proliferation of Internet services in recent years, technology for computer-supp...
This paper presents a cooperative work perspective on the role of computer artifacts in organisation...
Organizational processes today are marked by a growing fragmentation of knowledge and responsibiliti...
Interactivity remains a central and yet notoriously difficult notion in studies of computermediated ...