Coordination languages and their significance
Communications of the ACM
Just talk to me: a field study of expertise location
CSCW '98 Proceedings of the 1998 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work
ARIADNE and HOPLa: Flexible Coordination of Collaborative Processes
COORDINATION '96 Proceedings of the First International Conference on Coordination Languages and Models
Gamma and the Chemical Reaction Model: Fifteen Years After
WMP '00 Proceedings of the Workshop on Multiset Processing: Multiset Processing, Mathematical, Computer Science, and Molecular Computing Points of View
Distributed and Parallel Databases
Virtual teams: a review of current literature and directions for future research
ACM SIGMIS Database
Concepts, Techniques, and Models of Computer Programming
Concepts, Techniques, and Models of Computer Programming
A Policy-based Management Framework for Pervasive Systems using Axiomatized Rule-Actions
NCA '05 Proceedings of the Fourth IEEE International Symposium on Network Computing and Applications
Theory of Self-Reproducing Automata
Theory of Self-Reproducing Automata
Reactors: A data-oriented synchronous/asynchronous programming model for distributed applications
Theoretical Computer Science
A prolog-based language for workflow programming
COORDINATION'07 Proceedings of the 9th international conference on Coordination models and languages
An event-based coordination model for context-aware applications
COORDINATION'08 Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Coordination models and languages
Social-Networks Connect Services
Computer
IEEE Internet Computing
IEEE Internet Computing
Prioritized and parallel reactions in shared data space coordination languages
COORDINATION'05 Proceedings of the 7th international conference on Coordination Models and Languages
A language for task orchestration and its semantic properties
CONCUR'06 Proceedings of the 17th international conference on Concurrency Theory
COORDINATION'10 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Coordination Models and Languages
A novel approach to modeling context-aware and social collaboration processes
CAiSE'12 Proceedings of the 24th international conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering
Programming hybrid services in the cloud
ICSOC'12 Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Service-Oriented Computing
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Today people work together across time, space, cultural and organizational boundaries. To simplify and automate the work, collaboration employs a broad range of tools, such as project management software, groupware, social networking services, or wikis. For a collaboration to be effective, the actions of collaborators need to be properly coordinated, which requires taking into account social, structural, and semantic relations among actors and processes involved. This information is not usually available from a single source, but is spread across collaboration systems and tools. Providing a unified access to this data allows not only to establish a complete picture of the collaboration environment, but also to automate the coordination decision making by specifying formal rules that reflect social and semantic context effects on the ongoing collaboration processes. In this paper we present Statelets, a coordination framework and language for support and coordination of collaboration processes spanning multiple groupware tools and social networking sites, and demonstrate its suitability in several use cases.