Dynamic collaboration

Author:

Helquist Joel H.1,Deokar Amit2,Meservy Thomas3,Kruse John4

Affiliation:

1. Utah Valley University, Orem, UT, USA

2. Dakota State University, Madison, SD, USA

3. University of Memphis, Memphis, TN, USA

4. MItre Corporation, McLean, VA, USA

Abstract

Groups and decision makers are increasingly running headlong into complexity as interconnections and interdependencies between individuals and organizations continue to grow, decision time horizons shrink and more work is being performed by distributed teams. These factors are driving up overall problem space complexity and limiting the effectiveness of time-tested decision and collaboration processes. Increases in problem space complexity lead to higher equivocality in collaborative processes and associated products. Electronic collaboration support tools and associated process management schemes have proven successful in many challenging contexts. However, current collaboration process management schemes and tools may not be able to effectively handle more complex tasks. We posit that heightened problem space complexity must be addressed with commensurate process and technological support for collaborative efforts. To achieve truly agile collaborative solutions, we propose Dynamic Collaboration -- a process management scheme that utilizes group consensus, and process evolution via iterative process alignment and product refinement phases to meet the challenges posed by complexity and equivocality.

Publisher

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)

Subject

Computer Networks and Communications,Management Information Systems

Reference68 articles.

1. A Tale of Two Cities: Case Studies of Group Support Systems Transition

2. Gathering Innovative End-User Feedback for ContinuousDevelopment of Information Systems: A Repeatableand Transferable E-Collaboration Process

3. Briggs R. O. de Vreede G.-J. Nunamaker Jr. J. F. & Tobey D. (2001). ThinkLets: Achieving predictable repeatable patterns of group interaction with group support systems (GSS). Paper presented at the 34th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS-34 '01) Maui HI. Briggs R. O. de Vreede G.-J. Nunamaker Jr. J. F. & Tobey D. (2001). ThinkLets: Achieving predictable repeatable patterns of group interaction with group support systems (GSS). Paper presented at the 34th Annual Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS-34 '01) Maui HI.

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