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- CSCW Evaluation in Five Types - One of the potentially confusing aspects of evaluation within computer-supported cooperative work (CSCW) is that there are many activities one might wish to carry out at different times that evaluate socio-technical systems. I identify five ideal types: the effects of a new computer system in an organisation; the formative development of a piece of software; the evaluation of conceptual developments; the evaluation of a cooperative system where factors other than the computers are more interesting; and the determination of which piece of software to buy.
- University of Limerick (CSIS) - Department of Computer Science and Information Systems. Research areas include computer support for cooperative work , information systems engineering, computational linguistics, computational musicology, intelligent systems, human-computer interfaces, localisation, multimedia, soft computing, and computational intelligence.
- Calgary, University of - Department of Computer Science. Research areas: Artificial Intelligence, Biological Modeling and Visualization, Graphics, Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW) and Human Computer Interaction (HCI), Computer Vision, Programming Languages, Quantum Computing, Software Engineering.
- Decision Support Systems - "Decision Support Systems welcomes contributions on the concepts and operational basis for DSSs, Techniques for implementing and evaluating DSSs, DSS experiences, and related studies. In treating D S topics, manuscripts may delve into, draw-on, or expand such diverse areas as artificial intelligence, cognitive science, computer supported cooperative work, data base management, decision theory, economics, linguistics, management science, mathematical modeling, operations management systems, ad others. The common thread of articles published in the journal will be their relevance to theoretical, technical DSS issues."
- ECSCW '97 - 5th European conference on computer supported cooperative work. 7-11 Sep 1997. Lancaster, UK.
- Greening, Dan R. - CEO BigTribe. Entrepreneur and researcher. Personalization, collaborative filtering, computer-supported cooperative work, ubiquitous computing, simulated annealing, distributed computing, social psychology.
- Gergle, Darren - An Assistant Professor at Northwestern University. Includes Research in Human-Computer Interaction, Computer Supported Cooperative Work, and Computer-Mediated Communication, his doctoral thesis, and publications.
- CSCW 2004 - ACM conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work. 6-10 Nov 2004. Chicago, Illinois, USA.
- ECSCW2003 - 8th European conference of computer-supported cooperative work. 14-18 Sep 2003. Helsinki, Finland.
- van der Aalst, Wil - Eindhoven University of Technology - Information systems, simulation, Petri nets, process models, workflow management systems, verification techniques, enterprise resource planning systems, computer supported cooperative work, and interorganisational business processes.
Wikipedia Articles
- Computer-supported collaborative learning - Computer-supported collaborative learning (CSCL) is a research topic on supporting collaborative learning with the help of computers. It is related to Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW).
- Computer supported cooperative work - The term computer supported cooperative work (CSCW) was first coined by Irene Greif and Paul M. Cashman in 1984, at a workshop attended by individuals interested in using technology to support people in their work.
- Role-based collaboration - Role-Based Collaboration (RBC) represents an emerging research area [4]. RBC is an approach that can be used to integrate the theory of roles into Computer-Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW) systems and other computer-based systems.
- IT University of Copenhagen - The IT University of Copenhagen is a Danish cross-disciplinary University which approaches the study of information technology from a variety of perspectives: natural sciences (traditional computer science), software engineering, computer-supported cooperative work, the design and use of IT, e-business and the social, cultural and aesthetic aspects of IT.
- Productivity paradox - The productivity paradox (also known as the Solow computer paradox) is the observation made in Computer Supported Cooperative Work and other business process analysis that, as new information technology is introduced, worker productivity may go down, not up. It was especially common in the late 1980s and early 1990s.