Title: into the Collaboratory
1into the Collaboratory
- objective, subjective, intersubjective
realities intertwined - joanne twining, M.L.S. Doctoral Candidate,
School of Library Information Studies - Texas Womans University September 6, 1999
2Co - locateCo - lab - orateLab - oratoryCo -
lab - oratory
collaboratory
3Dissertation A Naturalistic Journey Into the
CollaboratoryIn Search of Understanding For
Prospective Participants http//www.intertwining
.org/dissertation
4Motivation for the Study
- Philosophical
- How ideas become knowledge
- objective, subjective, intersubjective
- Intellectual
- Modeling reality creation
- Instrumental
- What are the Rules of the Road for the
Collaboratory?
5Problem of the Study
- Philosophical
- What is the reality of the Collaboratory?
- Intellectual
- How is reality constructed in the Collaboratory?
- Instrumental
- Why do scholars collaborate online?
6Research Agenda
- Phase one
- Objective, document-based reality
- Phase two
- Subjective, experience-based reality
- Phase three
- Intersubjective, via Delphi technique
7- PHASE ONE an objective reality
-
intertwining model
PHASE THREE an inter-subjective reality
PHASE TWO a subjective reality
8Methodology
- Naturalistic Inquiry
- Criteria
- Confirmability
- Transferabilty
- Audits Let the data speak
- and leave a trail for others to follow...
9Questions
- Objective
- What does the documentary evidence say?
- Subjective
- What does the collaboratory experience say?
- Phase three
- What do Collaboratory Pioneers say?
10Approach
- Objective
- Examination of library holdings.
- Subjective
- Prolonged immersion in the online environment
- Phase three
- Delphi Among Collaboratory Pioneers
11How the Data Spoke
- Phase One
- triangulated taxono-bibliometric analysis (n86)
- qualitative content analysis (n22)
- CIRAL matrix of criteria for inclusion
12How the Data Spoke
- Phase Two
- site visits
- analysis of communication modes
- analysis of datatypes produced
13How the Data Spoke
- Phase Three
- Delphi Among Collaboratory Pioneers
- Rules of the road
- Skills valued in prospective participants
14into the Collaboratory Phase One
- an objective reality of the Collaboratory based
on the documentary evidence
15- What does the collaboratory, via the published
account, say it is?
16- The Documentary Evidence
- Collaboratorys first decade 1988-1998
- N89
17Documentary Evidence
- Available via library intermediation
- Databases
- Catalogs
- Holdings
- Interlibrary loan
- Extraordinary actions of Librarians
18Search Criteria
- Keyword collaboratory
- No wildcards or truncation
- Excludes large, relevant, surrounding literature
- Includes only highly pertinent documents
- Focus on collaboratory as information environment
19- Excludes documents NOT available via the library
- uncataloged Internetunpublished papersprivate
correspondence
203 Foundation Documents
- Philosophical
- 1988 - Wulfs NSF White Paper (unpublished)
- Intellectual
- 1989 - Lederberg Uncaphers Report
(unpublished) - Instrumental
- 1993 - NRCs National Collaboratories
21Triangulating Document
- Haddow, Gaby. 1997. The Nature of Journals of
Librarianship A review. Libres 7(1). March 31.
http//aztec.lib.utk.edu/libre7n1/haddow.html
Types of journal articles Scholarly
(citations) Glad tidings, testimony, and
research News-type articles
22Collaboratory Publications n86
23Taxonomy Construction
- Triangulated analysisfrequencies percentages
- n86
- 1. Wulf discipline x focus
- 2. Haddow article type
- 3. Lederberg Uncapher topic x approach
24Taxonomy 1
Wulfs (1988) White PaperPhilosophical
foundationof the Collaboratory Discipline x
Focus
25Wulf Taxonomy
- Disciplines that need to contribute
- Computer science (CS)
- Computer/communication engineering (CCE)
- Social, behavioral, economics (SBE)
- Focus of needed research
- Instrumentation
- Colleagues
- Data
26Taxonomy 1
- Discipline x Focus
- CS/CEE, SBE, LIS, OTHER
- X
- Instrumentation, Colleagues, Data
27Wulf Taxonomy
- Focus
- Instrumentation Colleague
Data Totals - Disciplines
- CS/CCE 30 2 2 34
- SBE 14 4 0 18
- LIS 5 2 1 8
- OTHER 18 6 2 28 totals 67 14
5 86
28- Wulf taxonomy Discipline x Focus n86
29Observation
- 19 disciplines contribute86 publications to the
collaboratory literature
Multi- or Inter- disciplinarity?
30Other Disciplines
- Chemistry Astronomy
- Physics Mathematics
- Psychology Government
- Education Botany
- Biology Medicine
- Journalism
- Knowledge Engineering
31Interdisciplinarity
- Klein (1990, 55) defines four ways
- by example
- by motivation
- by principles of interaction
- by terminological hierarchy
The space between the books
32Multiple disciplines contribute to create an
interdisciplinary information environment.
33Taxonomy 2
Haddow (1997) Article Type Glad tidings
Testimony News Type Research
34Haddow Taxonomy
- Type of article
- Number of articles
- Glad tidings testimony 14
- News-type 50
- Research 22
- Total 86
35Haddow TaxonomyType of Publication by Year N86
36Wulf X HaddowDiscipline of Research, N22
37Wulf X Haddow Focus of Research, N22
38Wulf X HaddowFrequencies Percentages
39Wulf X Haddow of Publications, Disciplines
Combined
40Relative Equality of Contribution
- (CS/CSS Other) Hard Sciences provide the
greater number of articles. MOST Hard Science
articles are News-type and Glad Tidings. - (CS/CSS Other) (SBE LIS) contribute
approximately the same numberof research
articles.
41Wulf X Haddow of Publications, Disciplines
Combined
42Relative Equality of Contribution
- (SBE LIS) Soft Sciencesprovide fewer
articles, but a greater percentage of those
articles are research. - Hard and Soft sciences contribute relatively
equal number of research articles.
43Interdisciplinarity
- The numbers and percentages of articles reflect
that the collaboratory is an interdisciplinary
environment by example, motivation, principles of
interaction. - Wulfs assumption of interdisciplinarity.
44Taxonomy 3
Lederberg Uncapher (1989) Intellectual
Foundationof the Collaboratory Topic x Approach
45Lederberg Uncapher Taxonomy
- Topics of needed research
- Systems Architecture
- Tools Technologies
- Users Testbeds
- Approach of research needed
- Design
- Implementation
- Testing
46 Theory Type added
- Construct or apply theories
- Generally specific
- Support praxis
47Lederberg Uncapher Taxonomy
- Approach
- Design
Impl. Test Theory Totals - Topic
- System Architecture 9 8 0 9 26
- Tools Technologies 8 11 3 4 26
- Uses Testbeds 5 12 6 11 34
- Totals 22 31 9 24 86
48Lederberg Uncapher Approach
49Lederberg Uncapher Topic X Approach
50Lederberg Uncapher X Haddow Topic of Theory
Research, n22
51Lederberg Uncapher X Haddow X WulfTheory
Research X Topic X Discipline
52Lederberg Uncapher X Haddow X WulfTheory
Research X Topic X Discipline
53Observations
- (SBE LIS) provide the
- greater number of theory research publications.
- The topics of theory researchare inversely
proportional between disciplines.
54Relative Equality of Contribution
- The disciplines make relatively equal
contributions to the Collaboratory literature
55Interdisciplinarity
- The Collaboratory is an interdisciplinary
environment
56Toward a Grounded TheoryQualitative content
analysis of Theory Research n22
57Qualitative Content Analysis
- Theory research n22
- TopicsSystems Architecture n5
- Tools Technologies n7
- Users Testbeds n10
58Systems Architecture Theory Research, N5
- Common themes
- Inter- and intra-systems communication,
integration, adaptability, and independence
supported by individual participation within an
indivisible and cohesive whole
59Tools Technology Theory Research, N7
- Common themes
- Equalization in communication via media richness
empowered by choice, power, openness, and sharing
60Users Testbeds Theory Research, N10
- Common themes
- Fair exchange, sharing, and commonalities, with
maintenance of strong individuality within the
collective, are positive.
61Theoretical ThemesPrinciples of Participation
- Integration and adaptability is necessary and
good. - Change, choice, and personal power are requisite.
- Consensus, sharing, and exchange are positive
and practiced. - Individuality and collectivity are distinctly
and respectfully maintained.
62Theoretical Themes Environment
- Absence of traditionally male(hierarchic or
patriarchal) social behaviors individualism,
dominance, competition, confrontation, mastery,
aggression, advantage, etc. (Crimshaw1986).
63Theoretical Themes Environment
-
- Collaboratory environment is antithetical to
traditional (male dominated) scientific and
technological practices.
64Theoretical Themes Environment
- Suggests a purposively de-gendered
environment, or an ungenderedness, which in many
circles (Haraway 1985) is remarkably feminist.
65 The collaboratory is an ungenderedtechnologicall
y-enabledinterdisciplinary scientificinformation
environment built from a relatively equal
contribution by the hard and soft sciences
66The problem for librarianshipThe Collaboratory
is an interdisciplinary information environment
- Traditional database collections, subject
category classifications, and search options do
not facilitate the search for collaboratory - twinings first finding violates Ranganathans
5th Law
67The Taxonomies
- Wulf discipline x focus
- Haddow article type
- LU topic x type
- Five categories, 27 subcategories
68- How would YOU search for a
- a research article about implementing a testbed
design for a medical collaboratory - ?
Wulf discipline x focus LU topic x type Haddow
article type
69into the Collaboratory Phase Two
- a subjective reality of the Collaboratory via
immersion in the online environment
70- Does the collaboratory exist?
- Is the collaboratory as the library represents?
71Alta Vista Search
- February 1998
- 468 hits for collaboratory
- Announcement of 350mil 5-year NSF KDI funding
for collaboratory research - February 1999
- 4,982 hits for collaboratory
72Toward Criteria for Inclusion as a Collaboratory
73NRCs Towards a National Collaboratory
(1993)Instrumental foundation of the
Collaboratory
- Defines the criteria for inclusion
- Raises individual and institutional issues and
concerns
74Criteria for Inclusion
- CIRAL Matrix
- Computerized Network
- Remote Instrumentation
- Resources to Support
- Data Archives
- Digital Libraries
75"derivative collaboratories"
- Do not meet the CIRAL criteria for inclusion,
mostly for lack of access to and remote control
of instrumentation.
76derivative collaboratories
- MIS Collaboratory at UT
- CREW Collaboratory at UMich
- Baltimore-Washington Regional Collab.
- CoVis Collaboratory
- MUDS, MOOs
77Collaboratory Test Site
- M2C The Materials MicroCharacterization
Collaboratory TelePresence Microscopy Sites - DOE-Funded
78M2CTelePresence Microscopy Sites
- Argonne National Laboratoryhttp//tpm.amc.anl.gov
- National Institute of Standards Technology
http//scanner.cme.nist.gov - Oak Ridge National Laboratory
http//tpm.amc.anl.gov/MMC/ - University of Illinois Champagne-Urbana
http//cmm-sun.mrl.uiuc.edu
79M2C meets all the CIRAL criteria for inclusion
80Site Visit
- SPARCSpace Physics and Aeronomy Research
Collaboratory - http//si.umich.edu/sparc
- (formerly UARC)
- Upper Atmospheric Space ScienceSondrestrom
Scatter Radar FacilityGreenland - NSF-Funded
81Site Visit
- EMSL
- Environmental Molecular Science Laboratory
Collaboratory - Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) in
Richland, Washington. http//www.emsl.pnl.gov2080
/dpcs/collab/ - Nuclear Waste CleanupMicro- SpectroscopesDOE-
Funded
82Site Visit
- EEC
- Experimental Electronic Collaboratory at DIII-D
Tokamak - http//lithos.gat.com
- US Atomics CorporationFission energyDOE-Funded
83Communication modes and data generated are
determined by1. instrument2. size of
experiment team
84Information resources and interfaces are not
managed by librarians or information
professionals, but by collaboratory scientists
85into the Collaboratory Phase Three
- an intersubjective reality of the Collaboratory
via Delphi Among Collaboratory Pioneers
86Delphi Technique
- Toward convergence, divergence, or stasis of
opinion among experts via interative rounds - Individual responses anonymous
- Communication via intermediary
- We think by way of what I meant to say was
87- STEPS
- The problem is identified
- An expert panel is developed
- The panel is presented the problem and asked to
respond - Responses are synthesized into a series of
statements - The synthesized statements are submitted to the
panel - The panel responds
- The process continues until convergence,
divergence, or stasis is identified.
88QuestionsWhat are the Rules of the road for
the collaboratory? (NRC 1993)
- What skills do you value in prospective
participants?
89Collaboratory Pioneersn6
- Criteria for Inclusion
- associated with a functioning CIRAL collaboratory
- "big picture" position in the collaboratory
- practicing scientist who has actively
participated in collaboratory experiments for one
year
90Seven Rules of the Road
- 1. Be direct in your communication.
- 2. Get involved, get others involved in
working on a problem. - 3. Have a real problem that the collaboratory can
help solve. - 4. Understand the opportunities and limitations
of collaboratory work.
91Seven Rules of the Road
- 5. Stay flexible within a formal framework of
meetings and experiments. - 6. Make frequent contributions to collaboratory
data repositories. - 7. Working in a collaboratory is not the same as
being physically present in a laboratory.
92Skills valued in prospective participants
- 1. Tolerance for evolving technology and
practices - 2.Good communication skills
- 3.Experience in the scientific techniques used
- 4.Good to expert scientific knowledge
- 5.General team skills
- 6.Computer application and Internet competence.
93Findings
- Subtle but remarkable differences in preference
for - balance between formal and informal
communication, and planned and fluid
experiment modes.
94Tuck and Earle (1996) group size is always a
determining factor in group communication
structures
- Egalitarian working group (under 6 people)
- camp (6-30 people)
- Hierarchical
- tribe (50-100 people)
- state (100 people)
95Findings Collaboratory Pioneers value a balance
of social, technological, and scientific skills
in prospective participants over a superior
expertise in any one of them.
96Findings Collaboratory pioneers
unanimously disagree that the hard and soft
disciplines have made a relatively equal
contribution.
97Findings "The collaboratory is an ungendered
environment" received a different response
from each participant.
98Needed Research
- 1. The preliminary findings of this study need to
be confirmed with more experts and in different
collaboratories.
99Needed Research
- 2. Evaluation and analysis of existing
collaboratory data stores with an eye toward - exploiting those stores to provide
automated, intelligent
information flow to
the collaboratory interface, and consilient,
expansive studies of collaboratory work
practices, and
100Needed Research
- mapping and modeling the actual work
practices and information
needs of
collaboratory participants as they relate to - trust building according to collaboratory
size toward - informing the design of collaboratory
interfaces, and - developing a Delphi-based Collaboratory Expert
System.
101Needed Research
- 3. Evaluation and analysis of extra-collaboratory
information practices of collaboratory scientists
as they relate to the library toward - developing a collaboratory science library, and
within it,
discipline-, instrument-, and
experiment-specific information
resources pertinent to practicing collaboratory
scientists.
102- the end
- joanne twining
- twining_at_intertwining.org
- http//www.intertwining.org/dissertation
103The gift from the goddess of the electronic
nuggetA BIT OF BYTES THAT HAVE NOTHING TO DO
WITH, BUT LEAD YOU TO SOMETHING IMPORTANTThe
Journal of Collaboratory Science
http//www.arl.org/sparc/http//www.arl.org/spa
rc/scipr.html