Title: CMC/CC A Groupware, CSCW, CMC
1CMC/CC AGroupware, CSCW, CMC
- Master IK, CIW, MMI
- L.M. Bosveld-de Smet
- Mon. 30/10/06 16.00-18.00
2Outline
- CSCW classifications / frameworks
- Collaboration computer conferencing
- Features
- Basic structure
- Social technical gap
- Communication and coordination the Coordinator
- Speech-act based protocol
3Groupware vs. CSCW vs. CMC
- Groupware
- Applications written to support collaboration of
several users - Team-oriented computer products
- CSCW
- Group working (cooperation, collaboration,
competition ?) supported by computer - Makes use of groupware
- Research design and evaluation of new
technologies to support social processes of team
work, often among distant partners - CMC
- Group communication supported by computer
- Research interpersonal communication via computer
4Overview CSCW
Groupware / CSCW / group support through CMC
Communication
Collaboration
Coordination
5CSCW system classes
6CSCW detailed overview of systems
7Groupware systems classifications
- By where and when the participants are performing
the cooperative work - (refined) time/space matrix
- By function
- By aspect of cooperative work supported
8Dix et al.s classification
- By function in cooperative framework primarily
supported - Direct communication between participants
computer-mediated communication - Common understanding meeting and decision
supporting systems - Participantsinteraction with shared work
objects shared applications and artifacts
9Cooperative work frameworksDix et al. (2003)
10Shneidermans classification
- Asynchronous interactions e-mail, news groups,
- Synchronous distributed interactions group
editing, Internet Relay Chat, video conferencing,
- Face to Face interactions brainstorming, voting,
and ranking,
11Synchronous CMC
12Example (1)
13Example (2) Avatar Conference
14CSCW global results
- Determinants of success are not clear
- Electronic mail, and chat widespread success
story - Video conferencing slowly growing
- Shared calendar programs repeatedly spurned
15Earliest CMC work
- Hiltz Turoff, 1993
- Foundation development of systems supporting
large groups to communicate about complex
problems - Most fundamental principles for optimizing group
support - Structures for group tasks
- User tailorability
16Computer conferencing
- Structured group communication accumulating
permanent transcript of discussion - Most important features to take care of
- Tailorability
- Quantitative communication structures
- Content-based communication
- Indirect communication
- Roles
- Notifications
17Basic computer conferencing structure
- Objects / nodes characterizing system
- Relationships / links between objects / nodes
Comment Reply Person Key words
Comment later than / earlier than in response to author / editor / reader relevant material
Reply author / editor / reader relevant material
Person member of conference interests of
Key words related to
18Current generation systems
- Findings Turoff et al. (2001)
- Infrequent ad hoc use
- No continual process
- Little tailorability
- No seamless transitions among various modes
- Information overload limit
- Limitation of discourse structures
- Basically comment-response format
19Semantic hypertext structure
- Structure to organize a constructive debate about
a topic in order to achieve - Collective group insights into
- Alternative desirable resolutions
- Feasible actions to take
-
- Argumentation systems
- Aquanet
- gIBIS
- SEPIA
- Virtual Notebook
- Design Intent
20Discourse structure for debating and argumentation
options
actions, goals, criteria, requirements,
solutions, decisions
voting scales desirability, feasibility
Pro link
Con link
arguments
arguments
opposition link
voting scales importance, validity
21Challenge CMC systems
- Promotion of collective intelligence
- Hiltz et al. (1986) elimination of process
losses due to blocking of alternative opinions
and views - Design of human communication systems design of
social systems - Roles
- Rules
- Floor control
-
- Bridge the social technical gap
22Social-technical gapAckerman (2001)
- Findings
- CMC elements allow enough communicative
suppleness - computational entities (information transfer,
roles, policies, ) lack flexibility, nuance and
contextualization similar to real life social
activity - attitude towards sharing information / making
work visible - lack of shared histories and meanings
- conflicting or multiple goals
- exceptions
- awareness vs. privacy vs. disturbing others
- lack of negotiation about norms of use,
exceptions, breakdowns - critical mass problem
- tailorability
- lack of incentives
23Social technical gap in action
- Online privacy
- P3P privacy preferences project of W3 consortium
- No sufficient nuance
- No social flexibility
- Systems require people to explicitly switch
states - Cf. The Coordinator (Winograd Flores, 1986)
- No allowance of ambiguity
24Elements of Communication
25Conversational Structure
- Turn-taking
- Context (internal, external)
- Topics, focus, forms of utterances
- Breakdown and repair
- Construction of shared understanding
26Speech Act Theory
- Wittgenstein Philosphical Investigations
- Austin How to Do Things with Words
- locutionary act
- illocutionary act
- perlocutionary act
- Searle The Classification of Illocutionary Acts
- representatives directives commissives
expressives declarations
27Coordinator / Action Workflow
- Structured conversations
- Action-oriented conversation
- Central coordinating structure for human
organizations - Based on taxonomy of linguistic acts
- Design concerned with breakdown anticipation
28Coordinator
29Coordinator under criticism
- Suchman "the adoption of speech act theory as a
foundation for system design, with its emphasis
on the encoding of speakers intentions into
explicit categories, carries with it an agenda of
discipline and control over organization members
actions"
30Application of CSCW to education
- Distance learning
- Exploration of novel teaching and learning styles
- Creation of more engaging experiences for
students - Greater learning efficiency
31Research in cooperative systems
- More difficult than in single-user applications
- Multiplicity of users (controlled experiments?)
- Flood of data from multiple users (orderly
analysis?) - No commonly accepted methodology
32Wireless brainstorming
- Davis et al. (2002) Wireless brainstorming
overcoming status effects in small group
decisions - Simple and inexpensive GDSS on wireless handheld
device - Mitigation of adverse impact of status
differences - Brainstorm on potential market names for computer
game - Discussion of names in group
- Voting of the best name
- Males higher status group members
- Anonimity helps minimize effects of status on
group decisions
33Cultural differences in participants online
collaborative behaviors
- Kim Bonk (2002) Cross-cultural comparisons of
online collaboration - Computer-supported collaborative learning of
multicultural learners - Comparison of online collaborative behaviors
among preservice teachers from 3 different
cultures - Korean students more social and contextually
driven - Finnish students more group-focused,
refelective, and theoretically driven - U.S. students more action-oriented, and
pragmatic in seeking results and giving solutions