Collaboration as Community-Building: A Case Study of Collaboration Profiles

Abstract

Many of MITRE's customer organizations operate in distributed locations and/or asynchronously and find it difficult to collaborate despite having tried one or more of the large number of collaboration tools in the marketplace. With increasingly mobile workers and the accepted practices of telecommuting and flexible time, our customers and our own company are faced with the need for better collaboration support. How can we best help them? In MITRE's Information Technology Center, we have ethnographers and human-computer interaction specialists with the skills to study work culture and work practices. We also have systems architects, technology designers, and implementers. In short, we have everyone needed to go from understanding a group's collaborative technology needs to implementing technology solutions in support of today's mobile, more flexible worker. Internally, we also have a need for different and better collaboration tools to work more closely together as a multi-faceted organization (e.g., project-related teams, communities of interest, departments, and divisions)a situation that parallels that of many of our customers. Who better to study than ourselves? This investigative study was designed to help us better understand current work practices, workarounds, collaboration needs and issues by applying social science techniques to characterize group work processes.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jan 01, 2007
Accession Number
AD1107026

Entities

People

  • Jill Drury
  • Laurie Damianos

Organizations

  • MITRE Corporation

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Engineered Resilient Systems

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Availability
  • Case Studies
  • Cognition
  • Cognitive Systems Engineering
  • Data Transmission
  • Electronic Mail
  • Electronic Messaging
  • Environment
  • Human-Computer Interaction
  • Information Systems
  • Mobility
  • Personality
  • Personnel Management
  • Probability
  • Psychology
  • Reliability
  • Social Sciences
  • Switching
  • Task Performance And Analysis
  • Teamwork
  • Teleconferencing
  • User Interface
  • Video
  • Video Teleconferencing

Readers

  • Agent-Based Social Robotics and Mobile-Assisted Learning in Virtual Environments.
  • Research Science/Academic Research
  • Software Engineering.