The impact of DSS on organizational communication
Information and Management
A federated architecture for information management
ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS)
Knowledge sharing and negotiation support in multiperson decision support systems
Decision Support Systems
Management Issues in Cooperative Computing
ACM Computing Surveys (CSUR)
Building Effective Decision Support Systems
Building Effective Decision Support Systems
Electronic Meetings: Technical Alternatives
Electronic Meetings: Technical Alternatives
Distributed decision making: a research agenda
ACM SIGOIS Bulletin
Social choice theory and distributed decision making
COCS '88 Proceedings of the ACM SIGOIS and IEEECS TC-OA 1988 conference on Office information systems
Using computerized collaborative work support systems to improve the logical systems design process
SIGCPR '88 Proceedings of the ACM SIGCPR conference on Management of information systems personnel
Teamwork Support in a Knowledge-Based Information Systems Environment
IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering
What can computer programs do to facilitate negotiation processes?
COCS '91 Proceedings of the conference on Organizational computing systems
A toolkit for negotiation support interfaces to multi-dimensional data
SIGMOD '97 Proceedings of the 1997 ACM SIGMOD international conference on Management of data
A new collaborative system framework based on a multiple perspective approach: InteliTeam
Decision Support Systems - Special issue: Collaborative work and knowledge management
A survey and critique of the impacts of information technology
International Journal of Information Management: The Journal for Information Professionals
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Decision Support Systems (DSSs), computer-based systems intended to assist managers in preparing and analyzing decisions, have been single-user systems for most of the past decade. Only recently has DSS research begun to study the implications of the fact that most complex managerial decisions involve multiple decision makers and analysts. A number of tools for facilitating group decisions have been proposed under the label Group Decision Support Systems (GDSSs).One of the most important functions of a GDSS is to provide problem-oriented services for communication among decision makers. On the basis of an analysis of the communication requirements in various group decision settings, this paper presents an architecture for defining and enforcing dynamic application-level protocols that organize decision group interaction. The architecture has been implemented on a network of personal computers in Co-oP, a GDSS for cooperative group decision making based on interactive, multiple-criteria decision methods.