Proceedings of the Fifth European Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work
[Book]
by John A. Hughes, Wolfgang Prinz, Tom Rodden, Kjeld Schmidt.
Dordrecht
Springer Netherlands
1997
(xv, 377 pages)
Conceptualizing and Designing for Cooperative Work --;The Production of Order and the Order of Production --;Plans as Situated Action: An Activity Theory Approach to Workflow Systems --;Rethinking CSCW systems: The architecture of MILANO --;Shared Information Spaces --;Effects of the amount of shared information on communication efficiency in side by side and remote help dialogues --;MetaWeb: Bringing synchronous groupware to the World Wide Web --;Constructing Common Information Spaces --;Cooperation in Real and Virtual Worlds --;Task Conflict and Language Differences: Opportunities for Videoconferencing --;The Social Construction and Visualisation of a New Norwegian Offshore Installation --;Staging a Public Poetry Performance in a Collaborative Virtual Environment --;Formalisms and Mediation --;On Distribution, Drift and the Electronic Medical Record: Some Tools for a Sociology of the Formal --;Tailoring Cooperation Support through Mediators --;Doing Software Development: Occasions for Automation and Formalisation --;Objects, Spaces and Bodies --;Introducing Third Party Objects into the Spatial Model of Interaction --;Cooperative Work and Lived Cognition: A Taxonomy of Embodied Actions --;Aether: An Awareness Engine for CSCW --;Sharing: Information and Process --;Providing Flexible Services for Managing Shared State in Collaborative Systems --;Supporting Groupware Conventions through Contextual Awareness --;Supporting the Flow of Information Through Constellations of Interaction --;The Influence of Devices and Environments --;Supporting cooperative working using shared notebooks --;Does 'roomware' matter? Investigating the role of personal and public information devices and their combination in meeting room collaboration --;Analysing movement and world transitions in virtual reality teleconferencing --;Cooperation and Access Coordination --;Designing for Cooperation at a Radio Station --;A Group-based Authorization Model for Cooperative Systems --;Gatherers of Information: The Mission Process at the International Monetary Fund --;Index of Authors.
The emergence of network facilities and the increased availability of personal computer systems over the last decade has seen the development of interest in the use of computers to support cooperative work.
Computer science.
Social sciences.
QA76
.
9
.
H85
B956
1997
by John A. Hughes, Wolfgang Prinz, Tom Rodden, Kjeld Schmidt.