Creative collaborations are a complex, yet common phenomenon. In this paper we introduce a model that describes the development of a creative outcome by a group, based on its efforts to structure the task through the exploration and adoption of concepts and artefacts. We use our model as a basis to analyse a collaborative filmmaking study. Through this, we show how the model is an effective tool for describing the actions of the group as its members work towards producing an outcome. We conclude that the model could be utilised as a tool for recognising patterns in creative collaborations, for understanding support needs, and for comparing instances of these tasks
This article presents a case in which analytical tools coming from the tradition of distributed cogn...
The recent model of Networked flow (NF) mapped out factors underlying optimal creative collaboration...
About the book: the contributors to this volume adopt a socio-cultural approach to understanding col...
Current creativity research is dominated by attention to the individual, with increasingly less atte...
This discusses the importance of this concept within creativity research. A distinction is made betw...
This open access book, through an in-depth process study of the interactions of two creative groups ...
For four years, intermedial artists Bethany Engstrom, Richard Corey, and John Bell have collaborated...
Collaboration plays a critical role in scientific creativity. This article draws on re-search involv...
Collaborating individuals can often find better solutions, still individual creativity is in focus b...
In the past two decades collaboration has been proposed as a means for reducing alienation in the wo...
This paper introduces a model of collective creativity that explains how the locus of creative probl...
For four years, intermedial artists Bethany Engstrom, Richard Corey, and John Bell have collaborated...
The work activity of small groups of three to four people was videotaped and analyzed in order to un...
This paper will address the group dynamics of co-operative creativity. We plan to focus on small gro...
The recent model of Networked Flow (NF) mapped out factors underlying optimal creative collaboration...
This article presents a case in which analytical tools coming from the tradition of distributed cogn...
The recent model of Networked flow (NF) mapped out factors underlying optimal creative collaboration...
About the book: the contributors to this volume adopt a socio-cultural approach to understanding col...
Current creativity research is dominated by attention to the individual, with increasingly less atte...
This discusses the importance of this concept within creativity research. A distinction is made betw...
This open access book, through an in-depth process study of the interactions of two creative groups ...
For four years, intermedial artists Bethany Engstrom, Richard Corey, and John Bell have collaborated...
Collaboration plays a critical role in scientific creativity. This article draws on re-search involv...
Collaborating individuals can often find better solutions, still individual creativity is in focus b...
In the past two decades collaboration has been proposed as a means for reducing alienation in the wo...
This paper introduces a model of collective creativity that explains how the locus of creative probl...
For four years, intermedial artists Bethany Engstrom, Richard Corey, and John Bell have collaborated...
The work activity of small groups of three to four people was videotaped and analyzed in order to un...
This paper will address the group dynamics of co-operative creativity. We plan to focus on small gro...
The recent model of Networked Flow (NF) mapped out factors underlying optimal creative collaboration...
This article presents a case in which analytical tools coming from the tradition of distributed cogn...
The recent model of Networked flow (NF) mapped out factors underlying optimal creative collaboration...
About the book: the contributors to this volume adopt a socio-cultural approach to understanding col...