Getting around the task-artifact cycle: how to make claims and design by scenario
ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS)
Studying context: a comparison of activity theory, situated action models, and distributed cognition
Context and consciousness
Contextual design: defining customer-centered systems
Contextual design: defining customer-centered systems
Distributed cognition: toward a new foundation for human-computer interaction research
ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction (TOCHI) - Special issue on human-computer interaction in the new millennium, Part 2
Situation awareness in emergency medical dispatch
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Analyzing human-computer interaction as distributed cognition: the resources model
Human-Computer Interaction
Collaboration and co-ordination in mature eXtreme programming teams
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Resources for Situated Actions
Interactive Systems. Design, Specification, and Verification
Resilience Markers for Safer Systems and Organisations
SAFECOMP '08 Proceedings of the 27th international conference on Computer Safety, Reliability, and Security
Distributed cognition and mobile healthcare work
BCS-HCI '08 Proceedings of the 22nd British HCI Group Annual Conference on People and Computers: Culture, Creativity, Interaction - Volume 2
An analytical framework for the evaluation of collaborative design around an interactive tabletop
Proceedings of the 11th International Conference of the NZ Chapter of the ACM Special Interest Group on Human-Computer Interaction
Fieldwork for requirements: Frameworks for mobile healthcare applications
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Towards a formal framework for reasoning about the resilience of dynamic interactive systems
EWDC '11 Proceedings of the 13th European Workshop on Dependable Computing
Confessions from a grounded theory PhD: experiences and lessons learnt
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
The effects of distinctiveness on the use of workspace and grabbing of other's documents
Proceedings of the 12th Annual Conference of the New Zealand Chapter of the ACM Special Interest Group on Computer-Human Interaction
USAB'11 Proceedings of the 7th conference on Workgroup Human-Computer Interaction and Usability Engineering of the Austrian Computer Society: information Quality in e-Health
Understanding infusion administration in the ICU through Distributed Cognition
Journal of Biomedical Informatics
Supporting field investigators with PVS: a case study in the healthcare domain
SERENE'12 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Software Engineering for Resilient Systems
A distributed cognition model for analysing interruption resumption during infusion administration
Proceedings of the 30th European Conference on Cognitive Ergonomics
Analysing interactive devices based on information resource constraints
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
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Distributed Cognition is growing in popularity as a way of reasoning about group working and the design of artefacts within work systems. DiCoT (Distributed Cognition for Teamwork) is a methodology and representational system we are developing to support distributed cognition analysis of small team working. It draws on ideas from Contextual Design, but re-orients them towards the principles that are central to Distributed Cognition. When used to reason about possible changes to the design of a system, it also draws on Claims Analysis to reason about the likely effects of changes from a Distributed Cognition perspective. The approach has been developed and tested within a large, busy ambulance control centre. It supports reasoning about both existing system design and possible future designs.