default search action
5. GROUP 2005: Sanibel Island, Florida, USA
- Mark Pendergast, Kjeld Schmidt, Gloria Mark, Mark S. Ackerman:
Proceedings of the 2005 International ACM SIGGROUP Conference on Supporting Group Work, GROUP 2005, Sanibel Island, Florida, USA, November 6-9, 2005. ACM 2005, ISBN 1-59593-223-2
Net communities
- Susan L. Bryant, Andrea Forte, Amy S. Bruckman:
Becoming Wikipedian: transformation of participation in a collaborative online encyclopedia. 1-10 - Cliff Lampe, Erik W. Johnston:
Follow the (slash) dot: effects of feedback on new members in an online community. 11-20 - Gregor McEwan, Saul Greenberg:
Supporting social worlds with the community bar. 21-30
Collocation and virtual collocation
- Kirstie Hawkey, Melanie Kellar, Derek F. Reilly, Tara Whalen, Kori M. Inkpen:
The proximity factor: impact of distance on co-located collaboration. 31-40 - Wendy A. Schafer, Doug A. Bowman:
Integrating 2D and 3D views for spatial collaboration. 41-50 - John M. Linebarger, Andrew J. Scholand, Mark A. Ehlen, Michael J. Procopio:
Benefits of synchronous collaboration support for an application-centered analysis team working on complex problems: a case study. 51-60
Finding expertise and information
- Tim Reichling, Kai Schubert, Volker Wulf:
Matching human actors based on their texts: design and evaluation of an instance of the ExpertFinding framework. 61-70 - Jun Zhang, Mark S. Ackerman:
Searching for expertise in social networks: a simulation of potential strategies. 71-80 - Junichiro Mori, Tatsuhiko Sugiyama, Yutaka Matsuo:
Real-world oriented information sharing using social networks. 81-84 - Patricia Ruma Spence, Madhu C. Reddy, Richard Hall:
A survey of collaborative information seeking practices of academic researchers. 85-88
IM and usability
- Stephanie Smale, Saul Greenberg:
Broadcasting information via display names in instant messaging. 89-98 - Elizabeth S. Guy:
"...real, concrete facts about what works...": integrating evaluation and design through patterns. 99-108 - Sameer Patil, Alfred Kobsa:
Uncovering privacy attitudes and practices in instant messaging. 109-112 - Stephen Chan, Benjamin Hill, Sarita Yardi:
Instant messaging bots: accountability and peripheral participation for textual user interfaces. 113-115
Decision-making and communication
- Sarita Yardi, Benjamin Hill, Stephen Chan:
VERN: facilitating democratic group decision making online. 116-119 - Dennis L. Chao, Justin Balthrop, Stephanie Forrest:
Adaptive radio: achieving consensus using negative preferences. 120-123 - Guy Vollmer, Katrin Gaßner:
Quality improvement of email communication in work groups and organizations by reflection. 124-127 - Tom Gross, Martin Kleppe:
FrameDrops: a mobile VideoBlog for workgroups and virtual communities. 128-131
Collaborative learning
- Rick Wash, Libby Hemphill, Paul Resnick:
Design decisions in the RideNow project. 132-135 - Davor Cubranic, Margaret-Anne D. Storey:
Collaboration support for novice team programming. 136-139 - Louise Barkhuus:
"Bring your own laptop unless you want to follow the lecture": alternative communication in the classroom. 140-143 - Michelle Bejian Lotia, Stephanie D. Teasley:
Supporting the dissertation process with grad tools. 144-147
Work rhythms and coordinative artifacts
- Magnus Nilsson, Morten Hertzum:
Negotiated rhythms of mobile work: time, place, and work schedules. 148-157 - Federico Cabitza, Marcello Sarini, Carla Simone, Michele Telaro:
When once is not enough: the role of redundancy in a hospital ward setting. 158-167 - Jakob E. Bardram, Claus Bossen:
A web of coordinative artifacts: collaborative work at a hospital ward. 168-176
Open source and distributed software development
- Flore Barcellini, Françoise Détienne, Jean-Marie Burkhardt, Warren Sack:
Thematic coherence and quotation practices in OSS design-oriented online discussions. 177-186 - Robert J. Sandusky, Les Gasser:
Negotiation and the coordination of information and activity in distributed software problem management. 187-196 - Cleidson R. B. de Souza, Jon Froehlich, Paul Dourish:
Seeking the source: software source code as a social and technical artifact. 197-206
Supporting communities
- Giulio Jacucci, Antti Oulasvirta, Antti Salovaara, Risto Sarvas:
Supporting the shared experience of spectators through mobile group media. 207-216 - Umer Farooq, John M. Carroll, Craig H. Ganoe:
Supporting creativity in distributed scientific communities. 217-226 - Christina Brodersen, Ole Sejer Iversen:
eCell: spatial IT design for group collaboration in school environments. 227-235
Supporting activities
- Beverly L. Harrison, Alex Cozzi, Thomas P. Moran:
Roles and relationships for unified activity management. 236-245 - Wolfgang Prinz, Baber Zaman:
Proactive support for the organization of shared workspaces using activity patterns and content analysis. 246-255 - Jonathan Grudin, Shari Tallarico, Scott Counts:
As technophobia disappears: implications for design. 256-259 - David F. Redmiles, Hiroko Wilensky, Kristie Kosaka, Rogério de Paula:
What ideal end users teach us about collaborative software. 260-263
Consistency maintenance
- Ning Gu, Jiangming Yang, Qiwei Zhang:
Consistency maintenance based on the mark & retrace technique in groupware systems. 264-273 - Carlos D. Correa, Ivan Marsic:
An optimization approach to group coupling in heterogeneous collaborative systems. 274-283 - Rui Li, Du Li:
A landmark-based transformation approach to concurrency control in group editors. 284-293
Transforming health care
- Jakob E. Bardram, Claus Bossen, Anders Thomsen:
Designing for transformations in collaboration: a study of the deployment of homecare technology. 294-303 - Margit Biemans, Janine Swaak, Marike Hettinga, Jan Gerrit Schuurman:
Involvement matters: the proper involvement of users and behavioural theories in the design of a medical teleconferencing application. 304-312 - David B. Martin, Mark Rouncefield, Jacki O'Neill, Mark Hartswood, David Randall:
Timing in the art of integration: 'that's how the bastille got stormed'. 313-322
Panel
- Thomas Erickson, Christine A. Halverson:
Intelligent design or felicitous evolution? sustaining order and activity in online communities. 323
Posters
- Louise Barkhuus:
Why everyone loves to text message: social management with SMS. 324-325 - Pernille Bjørn, Morten Hertzum:
Proactive behaviour may lead to failure in virtual project-based collaborative learning. 326-327 - M. Brian Blake, Daniel R. Kahan, David H. Fado, Gregory A. Mack:
SAGE: software agent-based groupware using e-services. 328-329 - A. J. Bernheim Brush, Tammara Combs Turner:
A survey of personal and household scheduling. 330-331 - Sallyann Bryant, Pablo Romero, Benedict du Boulay:
Pair programming and the re-appropriation of individual tools for collaborative programming. 332-333 - Eric C. Cook, Stephanie D. Teasley, Judith S. Olson:
Heterogeneity in harmony: diverse practice in a multimedia arts collective. 334-335 - Airong Luo, Judith S. Olson:
Collaboratory use by peripheral scientists. 336-337 - Anja Bechmann Petersen, Susanne Bødker:
Mediating the co-production of complex media products. 338-339 - Mårten Pettersson, Sarah Olofsson:
Taking juxtaposition into account: supporting people's work with maps. 340-341 - Julie Rennecker:
Promoting awareness in distributed mobile organizations: a cultural and technological challenge. 342-343 - Andrew J. Scholand, John M. Linebarger, Mark A. Ehlen:
Thoughts on critical infrastructure collaboration. 344-345 - Won-Joon Shin, Dong-Ho Kim, Myung-Joon Lee:
DAView: a linux WebDAV client supporting effective distributed authoring. 346-347 - Kevin F. White, Wayne G. Lutters:
Insightful illusions: requirements gathering for large-scale groupware systems. 348-349 - Lu Xiao, Jayne S. Litzinger:
Unraveling the ordering in persistent chat: a new message ordering feature. 350-351 - Naomi Yamashita, Toru Ishida:
Analyzing misconceptions in multilingual computer-mediated communication. 352-353
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.