Plans and situated actions: the problem of human-machine communication
Plans and situated actions: the problem of human-machine communication
Coordination mechanisms: towards a conceptual foundation of CSCW systems design
Computer Supported Cooperative Work - Special issue on the design of cooperative systems
Information Processing and Human-Machine Interaction: An Approach to Cognitive Engineering
Information Processing and Human-Machine Interaction: An Approach to Cognitive Engineering
Human Problem Solving
ACM SIGGROUP Bulletin
Computer Supported Cooperative Work
Projected cognition: capturing intent in descriptions of complex interaction
Proceedings of the 7th ACM conference on Designing interactive systems
Cooperative Building of Multiple Points-of-View Topic Maps with Hypertopic
Scaling Topic Maps
Translating social support practices into online services for family caregivers
Proceedings of the ACM 2009 international conference on Supporting group work
An Ontological Framework for Modeling Complex Cooperation Contexts in Organizations
Proceedings of the 2008 conference on Information Modelling and Knowledge Bases XIX
Beyond Electronic Patient's File: Assisting Conversations in a Healthcare Network
Proceedings of the 2006 conference on Cooperative Systems Design: Seamless Integration of Artifacts and Conversations -- Enhanced Concepts of Infrastructure for Communication
OTM '09 Proceedings of the Confederated International Conferences, CoopIS, DOA, IS, and ODBASE 2009 on On the Move to Meaningful Internet Systems: Part I
Towards participative and knowledge-intensive serious games
SGDA'12 Proceedings of the Third international conference on Serious Games Development and Applications
Dynamic "participative rules" in serious games, new ways for evaluation?
SocInfo'12 Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Social Informatics
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Most current theories about collective cognitive activities in limited groups apply to structurally closed co-operative situations Here we propose to work in the framework of intellectual transactions and communities of action theory with a view to describing and designing CSCW systems which can be used in more structurally open situations. First we compare this approach with other theories of collective cognition (such as those focusing on situated cognition and communities of practice, distributed cognition and coordination mechanisms). We then present the core concepts involved in defining communities of action, the duality of goals and forms of knowledge and the operational, strategic, integrative and relational categories of collective activity on which the OSIR model is based. We conclude by presenting as an example the application of the model to a research project designed to assist the setting up of a health network.