Context and consciousness: activity theory and human-computer interaction
Context and consciousness: activity theory and human-computer interaction
Activity theory as a potential framework for human-computer interaction research
Context and consciousness
Studying context: a comparison of activity theory, situated action models, and distributed cognition
Context and consciousness
Activity theory: implications for human-computer interaction
Context and consciousness
Designing for the dynamics of cooperative work activities
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Social Science, Technical Systems and Cooperative Work: Beyond The Great Divide
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The Art of the Metaobject Protocol
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Beyond the Black Box: Open Implementation
IEEE Software
Participative modelling and design of collaborative distance learning tools in the COLEARN project
TeleTeaching '93 Proceedings of the IFIP TC3 Third Teleteaching Conference
Introspect: a meta-level specification framework for dynamic, evolvable collaboration support
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IBM Systems Journal
The concept of activity as a basic unit of analysis for CSCW research
ECSCW'91 Proceedings of the second conference on European Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work
On "Technomethodologyn";: foundational relationships between ethnomethodology and system design
Human-Computer Interaction
Helping in collaborative activity regulation: modeling regulation scenarii
IHM 2003 Proceedings of the 15th French-speaking conference on human-computer interaction on 15eme Conference Francophone sur l'Interaction Homme-Machine
Enhancing support for collaboration in software development environments
CSCWD'06 Proceedings of the 10th international conference on Computer supported cooperative work in design III
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Users need more evolving CSCL systems allowing them to coconstruct their groupware environment. As a response to this problem, this paper presents how we are trying to define more foundational relationships between human and computer sciences. Starting from studies of the contribution of human science to CSCW, we present some approaches similar to ours. We finally present DARE, our new meta-groupware. DARE takes elements coming from both human and computer sciences defining a boundary abstraction with its conceptual model. Its design is mainly rooted in Activity Theory and advanced software design strategies like open implementation. DARE particularly emphasises on co-construction and expansiveness properties of human activity and may be defined as more than a meta-groupware, but as a reflective groupware.