ABSTRACT

The National Science Foundation funded the first Coordination Theory and Collaboration Technology initiative to look at systems that support collaborations in business and elsewhere. This book explores the global revolution in human interconnectedness. It will discuss the various collaborative workgroups and their use in technology. The initiative focuses on processes of coordination and cooperation among autonomous units in human systems, in computer and communication systems, and in hybrid organizations of both systems. This initiative is motivated by three scientific issues which have been the focus of separate research efforts, but which may benefit from collaborative research. The first is the effort to discover the principles underlying how people collaborate and coordinate work efficiently and productively in environments characterized by a high degree of decentralized computation and decision making. The second is to gain a better fundamental understanding of the structure and outputs of organizations, industries, and markets which incorporate sophisticated, decentralized information and communications technology as an important component of their operations. The third is to understand problems of coordination in decentralized or open computer systems.

part 1|256 pages

Theoretical Approaches to Coordination and Collaboration

chapter 5|36 pages

Two Design Principles for Collaboration Technology

Examples of Semiformal Systems and Radical Tailorability *

chapter 7|68 pages

Knowledge, Discovery, and Growth

part 2|148 pages

Collaboration Technology for Specific Domains

chapter 10|27 pages

Trellis

A Formally Defined Hypertextual Basis for Integrating Task and Information

chapter 11|21 pages

Problems of Decentralized Control

Using Randomized Coordination to Deal with Uncertainty and Avoid Conflicts

part 3|176 pages

Studies of Collaboration

chapter 14|26 pages

Seeding, Evolutionary Growth, and Reseeding

The Incremental Development of Collaborative Design Environments

chapter 15|34 pages

Distributed Group Support Systems

Theory Development and Experimentation

chapter 16|27 pages

Transforming Coordination

The Promise and Problems of Information Technology in Coordination

part 5|73 pages

Collaboratories

chapter 24|26 pages

Social Theoretical Issues in the Design of Collaboratories

Customized Software for Community Support Versus Large-Scale Infrastructure

chapter 25|22 pages

A Path to Concept-Based Information Access

From National Collaboratories to Digital Libraries

chapter 26|23 pages

Technology to Support Distributed Team Science

The First Phase of the Upper Atmospheric Research Collaborator/(UARC)