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Social Awareness

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Internet TCP/IP - January 1st, 1983. Linking documents. ... Solid Door with Please Open Slowly Sign. vs. Glass Door. Visibility. of Social Information. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Social Awareness


1
Social Awareness
  • Carlos A. Sánchez
  • 03/04/2008

2
Agenda
  • CONCEPTS
  • Historical Perspective ? 40,000 B.C.
  • BABBLE - LOOPS (IBM Social Computing Lab)
  • Knowledge Management Application
  • Social Translucence
  • AWARE (University of Aarhus Denmark)
  • Context Mediated Social Awareness in Mobile
    Cooperation Healthcare environment
  • Java Awareness Context Framework JACF
  • iSOCIALIZE (University of Aalborg Denmark)
  • Mobile Social Awareness amongst family and
    acquaintances
  • Awareness Cues

3
Historical Perspective (I)
  • What is the percent genetic difference between
    humans an chimpanzees?
  • 1.23
  • What is the percent critical difference?
  • 0.01 to 0.02
  • Which one is arguably the most critical
    difference?

4
Historical Perspective (II)
  • LANGUAGE 40,000 B.C.
  • CONVERSATION
  • Why is conversation important?
  • Synchronous Knowledge Transfer in a Social Space
  • What was missing?

5
Historical Perspective (III)
  • WRITING 4,000 B.C. - Cuneiform
  • 2,000 B.C. - Alphabetic Script
  • PERSISTENCE
  • What did persistence bring?
  • Asynchronous Knowledge Transfer
  • What was missing?

6
Historical Perspective (IV)
  • Printing Press Johan Gutenberg, 1439
  • ? Mass Dissemination of Knowledge
  • ? Standards A book was the same everywhere
  • ? Who said what when
  • What did the printing press bring?
  • Scientific Communities ? Industrial Revolution
  • What was missing?

7
Historical Perspective (V)
  • Linking computers
  • ARPANET X.25 - October 29th, 1969
  • Internet TCP/IP - January 1st, 1983
  • Linking documents
  • WWW First Web Page ? August 6th ,1991
  • What did these added?
  • Asynchronous and Synchronous Communications
  • Decoupling of Space and Time
  • Instantaneous Mass Coverage
  • Multiple way Communications
  • What was missing?

8
Historical Perspective (VI)
  • Linking people Web 2.0 - 2004
  • Chat rooms, collaborative filtering, mash-ups,
    podcasting, social navigation, social search,
    virtual communities, sharing, blogs, wikis
  • What did Web 2.0 bring?
  • A Digital knowledge oriented environment where
    human social interactions create and share
    content using the web as a platform.
  • What is missing?
  • Can we do better?

9
Concepts Review
  • Conversation, Persistence, Synchronous and
    Asynchronous Communications, Place decoupling,
    mass dissemination, who said what/when, multi-way
    communications, knowledge communities, and
    linking computers, documents and people.
  • What is used in IM systems?
  • What is gained? What is lost?

10
Social Translucence
  • Babble Loops

11
Social Translucence - Properties
  • Solid Door with Please Open Slowly Sign
  • vs. Glass Door
  • Visibility of Social Information
  • Humans react faster to movement, faces and
    figures than printed signs
  • Awareness Support
  • I know you are in the other side. You know Im
    here
  • We both know the social rules
  • Accountability
  • I know that you know that I know

12
Social Translucence Translucent vs.
Transparent
Power of Constraints Private vs. Public
Information
13
Social Translucence Opaque Digital Systems
  • Digital Systems are generally opaque to social
    information
  • In the digital world we are socially blind
  • i.e. Waiting in Line at USPS vs.
  • Waiting on-line for the IM tech support at ebay
  • What could be done? More on this coming

14
Social Translucence - Babble
  • Knowledge Management Systems
  • Capture, Retrieval, Dissemination of and
    organizations internal information
  • Traditional View
  • Data Mining, Text clustering, database documents
  • Social View
  • Production and use of knowledge is a social
    phenomena

15
Social Translucence - Babble
  • Social View of Knowledge Management
  • Who has worked on a project?
  • What have they done? Can we talk to them?
  • How have they used existing knowledge?
  • Social references for calls vs. database list
  • Information in databases is more useful if it
    provides links to enter social networks
  • Knowledge database vs. Knowledge Communities

16
Social Translucence - Babble
  • Conversationally Based Knowledge Community
  • Conversation is essential Natural medium to
    create, develop and validate knowledge
  • Conversation is a deep interactive intellectual
    process
  • Conversation is a fundamental social process
  • People speak to an audience
  • People portray themselves through conversation

17
Social Translucence - Conversation
  • Did I say that conversation is important?

18
Social Translucence Digital Conversation
  • Digital Conversations PERSIST
  • Therefore
  • They can be synchronous or asynchronous
  • With an intimate or vast audience
  • Can be searched, browsed, replayed, annotated,
    visualized, restructured, etc.

19
Social Translucence Activity Support
  • Approaches to make Social Activity Visible
  • Realist i.e. Teleconferencing
  • Problems Scale, cost, social cues not well
    conveyed, bandwidth, support
  • Mimetic i.e. Virtual Environments, Avatars
  • Problems Scale, has to manipulate avatars to
    produce social cues, support
  • Abstract i.e. Waiting on-line example next slide
  • Less is more easy to understand, implement and
    maintain

20
Social Translucence Abstract Social Proxies
21
Social Translucence BabbleKnowledge Management
Community
22
Social Translucence LOOPSWeb Interface
23
Social Translucence LoopsBulletin Board
24
Social Translucence - Babble
Persistent textual representation of a
conversation
Everybody knows that conversations are persistent
and shared in a sequential structure What are
the challenges?
25
Social Translucence - Babble
Social Proxy of a Conversation
26
Social Translucence - Babble
Structure of a Knowledge Community
27
Social Translucence - Babble
Diachronic (Longitudinal) Proxies
28
The AWARE Architecture
  • Supporting Context-Mediated social Awareness in
    Mobile Cooperation

29
AWARE Architecture
  • Context Aware Computing as facilitator of social
    awareness
  • CASE Mobile Collaboration in a hospital
    environment
  • AWARE Architecture Generic platform for
    supporting context mediated social awareness
  • JACT Java Awareness Context Framework

30
AWARE Architecture Operational Issues
  • Hospital buildings are large. People move around
    (not co-located).
  • Nurses spend large amount of times keeping track
    of physicians location and availability.
  • Interns need to consult frequently with senior
    doctors about patients.
  • Doctors in operating room frequently have to wait
    for test results before advancing. Meanwhile they
    perform other activities
  • Who to contact? When? How? Where?

31
AWARE Architecture
  • Awareness in CSCW
  • Goal is to minimize unwanted interruptions
    through context-mediate social awareness
  • Interruptions
  • 90 of brief conversations are unplanned
  • Only 55 of people who are interrupted continue
    in the same activity
  • Blocking calls is not an option in a hospital
  • 60 of phone calls fail to reach recipient

32
AWARE Architecture
  • Context-Mediated Social Awareness
  • In working settings people avoid interrupting
    each other when proper mechanisms are in place
  • Monitoring The actors activity provide
    information to be monitored i.e. operating in
    room 103
  • Displaying The actor selects what status
    information to be displayed i.e. at lunch.

33
AWARE Architecture
  • Awarephone requirements
  • Context-mediated social awareness via context
    cues.
  • Direct synchronous communications
  • Exchange of prioritized messages by placing
    virtual post-it notes on a co-worker.

34
AWARE Architecture
35
AWARE Architecture
  • Test Results
  • Everybody liked the system
  • People dont like to provide location information
  • Dont want to provide the ability to be tracked
    i.e. length of the coffee breaks
  • Cell phone is preferred to pagers ? provides the
    ability for immediate communication
  • Preset messages is a desirable option

36
AWARE Architecture
37
AWARE Architecture - JACF
38
iSocialize
  • Investigating Awareness Cues for a Mobile Social
    Awareness Application

39
iSocialize
  • Goals of the Study
  • Understand the nature of social awareness between
    acquainted and closely related people
  • How technology as well as traditional methods of
    communication support awareness

40
iSocialize
  • Challenges
  • Participating families found it difficult to
    maintain and overview of activities of family and
    friends
  • Participants found it difficult to determine
    appropriate times to call or interrupt
  • Participants expressed concerns about sharing all
    kinds of information about them

41
iSocialize
  • Social Awareness Cues
  • Activity Actions and whereabouts of partner
  • Status Communication state
  • Relation Defines the social relation between
    partners
  • Vicinity Distance to partner How much effort
    contact requires

42
iSocialize
43
iSocialize
44
iSocialize
45
iSocialize
46
iSocialize
47
iSocialize
  • Evaluation
  • 20 Subjects at Aalborg University - Denmark
  • Average age 24 years old
  • Five pairs acquainted Five pairs unacquainted
  • Video recorded sessions two participants per
    session
  • Wizard of Oz evaluation

48
iSocialize
  • Findings
  • Imprecise Awareness Cues People dont want to
    provide exact location
  • Awareness Cues Integration Challenges Privacy
    Concerns i.e. location vs. activity
  • Difficult to Maintain a mental model of contacts
  • Changes and updates of awareness cues
  • Awareness cues requires previous social construct

49
Thats all FolksThank you!
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