Virtual individuals, virtual groups : human dimensions of groupware and computer networking
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Virtual individuals, virtual groups : human dimensions of groupware and computer networking
(Cambridge series on human-computer interaction, 11)
Cambridge University Press, 1996
- : hc
Available at 39 libraries
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Note
Bibliography: p. 317-362
Includes indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Designers, implementers, and users of computer network applications are all deeply involved in the processes of social and cultural change, whether or not they consciously and actively choose to consider these processes. Issues such as community and privacy, dependence and individualism are no longer simply the province of philosophers and social scientists; they are tightly interwoven in the design and use of network applications. Virtual Individuals, Virtual Groups explores the social dimensions of the powerful computing applications that are shaping our culture. It addresses design and theoretical issues relating to groupware and other applications of computer networks. It considers computer network applications in terms of the notions of genre and narrative, in a framework that is broadly applicable to the development of a wide range of computing and communication systems, such as virtual reality and multimedia.
Table of Contents
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Virtual individuals and virtual groups
- 3. The shape of groups to come: Efforts to define, label, explain, and model collaborative activity
- 4. Shared resources and spaces in CSCW applications: lessons from the uses of desks, tables, whiteboards, office settings, and video
- 5. Cultural objects, technological dreams, and CSCW applications: Dependence, autonomy, and intellectual augmentation
- 6. Privacy, anonymity, agency: applications of computer networking and the development of social analogues
- 7. Toward a genre-responsive design approach for computing applications.
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