Connections: new ways of working in the networked organization
Connections: new ways of working in the networked organization
Visual Who: animating the affinities and activities of an electronic community
Proceedings of the third ACM international conference on Multimedia
Referral Web: combining social networks and collaborative filtering
Communications of the ACM
On the recommending of citations for research papers
CSCW '02 Proceedings of the 2002 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work
The link prediction problem for social networks
CIKM '03 Proceedings of the twelfth international conference on Information and knowledge management
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Augmenting the social space of an academic conference
CSCW '04 Proceedings of the 2004 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work
Exploring patterns of social commonality among file directories at work
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
The challenges of recommending digital selves in physical spaces
Proceedings of the 2007 ACM conference on Recommender systems
Comparing tagging vocabularies among four enterprise tag-based services
Proceedings of the 2007 international ACM conference on Supporting group work
A supervised machine learning link prediction approach for academic collaboration recommendation
Proceedings of the fourth ACM conference on Recommender systems
Group and link analysis of multi-relational scientific social networks
Journal of Systems and Software
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Busy academics and professionals are being called upon to manage more and more relationships. Many details of collaboration are accessible in digital libraries and other repositories. With Relationship-Oriented Computing, we posit that network information embedded in these repositories can be leveraged to improve the human need to manage and form the most productive relationships. To explore this idea, we developed a relationship-network application, called Relescope, and deployed it at the ACM CSCW 2004 conference. It provided a personalized report to attendees based on publication and citation information. The report was intended to provide concrete insights into the relationship-network that could be acted upon. Results of a survey showed that 52% of responders used their report to recognize and talk to others or plan which talks to attend. People with fewer collaborators were more inclined to use Relescope than the people with the most collaborators. Lessons learned and future work are discussed.