Software engineers from Life and Specialty Ventures (LSV) mentor UNF Computing senior project students on web application systems development projects. Below news article provides a window into their work.
http://www.clomedia.com/articles/6406-internships-help-build-talent-pipelines
Article published on August 4, 2015 at Chief Learning Officer online magazine, http://www.clomedia.com/
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
Presented a paper on Nonprofit Organization IT adoption and usage at AMCIS 2015
Paper Title:
A Preliminary Study of Information Technologies Usage in Nonprofit Organizations
Abstract:
Authors:
Karthikeyan Umapathy and Haiyan Huang
Conference:
2015 Americas Conference on Information Systems (AMCIS), Puerto Rico
Dates:
August 13-15, 2015
DOI for the paper:
http://aisel.aisnet.org/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1156&context=amcis2015
Link to the presentation:
https://prezi.com/yavdkeg5wb0l/a-preliminary-study-of-information-technologies-usage-in-non/
A Preliminary Study of Information Technologies Usage in Nonprofit Organizations
Abstract:
In this paper, we present the results of a preliminary survey study to examine the ways in which regional nonprofit organizations (NPOs) in the U.S. adopted and utilized information technologies. The majority of the survey respondents (72.5%) consists of small to medium sized NPOs. The survey findings reveal that most responding organizations don’t have a technology plan even though they consider information technology as an important driving force to achieve organizational missions. A pragmatic approach that adopts mature, proven technologies is the most common approach followed by the respondents. Our findings also provide some empirical insights on how NPOs perform different technological tasks, manage data, and exploit web capabilities.
Authors:
Karthikeyan Umapathy and Haiyan Huang
Conference:
2015 Americas Conference on Information Systems (AMCIS), Puerto Rico
Dates:
August 13-15, 2015
DOI for the paper:
http://aisel.aisnet.org/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1156&context=amcis2015
Link to the presentation:
https://prezi.com/yavdkeg5wb0l/a-preliminary-study-of-information-technologies-usage-in-non/
Labels:
Conference papers,
Nonprofits
Location:
Fajardo, Fajardo, Puerto Rico
Tuesday, March 24, 2015
Paper on Conceptual Model of Website Design Elements that Influences Credibility and Trustworthiness accepted at the 2015 SAIS Conference
Paper title: Conceptual Model of Website Design Elements that Influences Credibility and Trustworthiness
Abstract:
In today’s competitive environment, it is important for web designers to understand what design elements are essential for attracting visitors, making the visitor trust the website, and perform intended actions like placing an order and revisiting the site. Trustworthiness of a website heavily relies on a good first impression and visitor’s visual perception of the user interface. Therefore, the focus of this research is to investigate the effects of visual design elements on trustworthiness of a site. In this research-in-progress paper, we develop a conceptual model to depict the relationships among website design elements and trustworthiness. This conceptual model aids website designers understand what elements are appealing to the visual senses, and conjures credibility and trust.
Authors: Chris LaValley and Karthikeyan Umapathy
Conference:
2015 Southern Association for Information Systems (SAIS) Conference
Hilton Head, SC, USA, March 20-21, 2015
Link to the presentation:
https://prezi.com/qojhcmuut8oq/website-trustworthiness-conceptual-model/
Abstract:
In today’s competitive environment, it is important for web designers to understand what design elements are essential for attracting visitors, making the visitor trust the website, and perform intended actions like placing an order and revisiting the site. Trustworthiness of a website heavily relies on a good first impression and visitor’s visual perception of the user interface. Therefore, the focus of this research is to investigate the effects of visual design elements on trustworthiness of a site. In this research-in-progress paper, we develop a conceptual model to depict the relationships among website design elements and trustworthiness. This conceptual model aids website designers understand what elements are appealing to the visual senses, and conjures credibility and trust.
Authors: Chris LaValley and Karthikeyan Umapathy
Conference:
2015 Southern Association for Information Systems (SAIS) Conference
Hilton Head, SC, USA, March 20-21, 2015
Link to the presentation:
https://prezi.com/qojhcmuut8oq/website-trustworthiness-conceptual-model/
Tuesday, November 11, 2014
Paper on Review of Web Service Specifications for Long-running Conversations accepted at the CONISAR 2014
Paper title: Review of Web Service Specifications for Long-running Conversations
Abstract:
Despite the growing number of standards and interest in web services, support for implementation of long-running conversations is inadequate. Most real world business transactions typically consists of series of business activities. Such transactions originate from different sources which have multiple web services running to achieve a specific result. In this paper, we provide an overview of long-running conversation properties, and a review of relevant web service specifications. Our analysis indicates that WS-Coordination and WS-BusinessActivity specifications are the best option for implementing long-running conversations using web services.
Authors: Chirag N. Rana and Karthikeyan Umapathy
Conference:
2014 Conference on Information Systems Applied Research (CONISAR)
Baltimore, Maryland, November 6-9, 2014
Link to the article:
http://proc.conisar.org/2014/pdf/3318.pdf
Link to the presentation:
https://prezi.com/lk1dthiwoh6v/review-of-web-service-specifications-for-long-running-conver/
Abstract:
Despite the growing number of standards and interest in web services, support for implementation of long-running conversations is inadequate. Most real world business transactions typically consists of series of business activities. Such transactions originate from different sources which have multiple web services running to achieve a specific result. In this paper, we provide an overview of long-running conversation properties, and a review of relevant web service specifications. Our analysis indicates that WS-Coordination and WS-BusinessActivity specifications are the best option for implementing long-running conversations using web services.
Authors: Chirag N. Rana and Karthikeyan Umapathy
Conference:
2014 Conference on Information Systems Applied Research (CONISAR)
Baltimore, Maryland, November 6-9, 2014
Link to the article:
http://proc.conisar.org/2014/pdf/3318.pdf
Link to the presentation:
https://prezi.com/lk1dthiwoh6v/review-of-web-service-specifications-for-long-running-conver/
Labels:
Conference papers,
Interoperability,
web services
Location:
Baltimore, MD, USA
Friday, September 12, 2014
UNF Computing User Group Expo and CTO Panel
UNF School of Computing is organizing
User Group Expo and CTO Panel event
on Saturday, October 25th from 9:30 AM to 11:30 AM at the Adam W. Herbert
University Center. The user group expo is being organized with the
intention of having different local user groups set up a table/booth and
provide information about their activities and encourage students to become members.
The CTO Panel event is being organized with the intention of having CTOs
discuss information technology advances, challenges and opportunities and their
impact on educating future technology professionals.
Registration is required to attend the event. Please
register at below link:
You can find more information about the event at http://tiny.cc/ugcto.
Link to the Prezi used for CTO panel discussions:
Link to the Prezi used for CTO panel discussions:
Location:
Jacksonville, FL, USA
Sunday, September 01, 2013
BROKEN LINK - Your company’s website may be doing more harm than good
Jacksonville 904 magazine August 2013 issue provides some good best practices to follow when building business websites. Well, I have admit my bias about the article as I was interviewed by the author. Article is written by Jocelyn Tolbert.
Article link: http://trendmag2.trendoffset.com/publication/?i=169064&p=18
Mobile-friendly: http://trendmag.trendoffset.com/article/Media/1467848/169064/article.html
Article link: http://trendmag2.trendoffset.com/publication/?i=169064&p=18
Mobile-friendly: http://trendmag.trendoffset.com/article/Media/1467848/169064/article.html
Labels:
Best Practices,
News Articles,
Website
Location:
Jacksonville, FL, USA
Wednesday, November 07, 2012
Won CONISAR 2012 Conference Best Paper Award
Paper titled "Comparing Performance of Web Service Interaction Styles: SOAP vs. REST" won the best conference paper award at CONISAR 2012 conference, New Orleans, LA, USA.
Abstract:
This paper presents a comparative performance evaluation of two Web service implementations: one is based on SOAP and the other on Representational State Transfer (REST). Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) and REST-based development approaches handle service interactions quite differently. SOAP is a standardized framework for constructing and processing messages independent of the technological capabilities of the receiver and can work on top of a variety of application layer protocols such as RPC, HTTP, or SMTP, whereas, REST is a set of principles for designing Web applications (HTTP as the underlying protocol). We built SOAP and REST-based Web services that perform Create, Read, Update, and Delete (CRUD) operations on a database and retrieve local files. We utilized response time and throughput metrics to compare the performance of these Web services. We found that, on average, REST has better performance compared to SOAP, though not all results were statistically conclusive. As an ancillary outcome, we found that developing Web services using SOAP was easier, due to considerable tool support. However, developing Web services using REST was time consuming and difficult due to the necessity of in-depth knowledge of HTTP and rudimentary tool support.
Authors:
Pavan Kumar Potti
Sanjay Ahuja
Karthikeyan Umapathy
Zornitza Prodanoff
This paper was written based on Pavan Kumar's master thesis. I presented this paper at the CONISAR 2012 on November 2, 2012.
Abstract:
This paper presents a comparative performance evaluation of two Web service implementations: one is based on SOAP and the other on Representational State Transfer (REST). Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP) and REST-based development approaches handle service interactions quite differently. SOAP is a standardized framework for constructing and processing messages independent of the technological capabilities of the receiver and can work on top of a variety of application layer protocols such as RPC, HTTP, or SMTP, whereas, REST is a set of principles for designing Web applications (HTTP as the underlying protocol). We built SOAP and REST-based Web services that perform Create, Read, Update, and Delete (CRUD) operations on a database and retrieve local files. We utilized response time and throughput metrics to compare the performance of these Web services. We found that, on average, REST has better performance compared to SOAP, though not all results were statistically conclusive. As an ancillary outcome, we found that developing Web services using SOAP was easier, due to considerable tool support. However, developing Web services using REST was time consuming and difficult due to the necessity of in-depth knowledge of HTTP and rudimentary tool support.
Authors:
Pavan Kumar Potti
Sanjay Ahuja
Karthikeyan Umapathy
Zornitza Prodanoff
This paper was written based on Pavan Kumar's master thesis. I presented this paper at the CONISAR 2012 on November 2, 2012.
Here is the link for the presentation:
Here is the link for the article:
Here is the list of papers that won awards at CONISAR 2012:
Labels:
Award,
Conference papers,
SOAP,
standards,
web services
Location:
New Orleans, LA, USA
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Digging into Human Rights Violations Talk at the Western University
I was invited by Western University, Canada to give talk on the
system architecture developed for the Digging into Human Rights Violation
Software. Talk was part of the panel discussion titled "Digging into Human
Rights Violation: What We Know and What We Don't." Panel members were Ben
Miller from Georgia State University, Lu Xiao from Western University, and
Karthikeyan Umapathy from University of North Florida. Panel discussion was held on June 19, 2012 from 10 AM to 11:30 AM at the Faculty of Information & Media Studies, Western University, London, Canada.
For more information on the panel:
Labels:
Digging into Data,
Talks
Location:
Perth Dr, London, ON N6G, Canada
Saturday, February 25, 2012
Web of Web Things Talk at the Joe Berg Seminar
On February 21, 2012, I gave a talk on Web technologies at
the Joe Berg Seminar held at the Museum of Science and History, Jacksonville,
FL.
Title of talk: "Web of Web Things"
Talk provided an overview of value of the Web, growth of the
Web, and a discussion on past, present, and future Web technologies. Talk provided
examples of global projects (such as Ushahidi, PatientsLikeMe, and Kiva) that use
Web technologies to make a difference in the global society. The talk also
provided examples of UNF student projects that are making a difference in the
Jacksonville community.
Mission of Joe Berg Seminar:
“The Joe Berg Seminars of Jacksonville presents challenging
evening seminars and programs for outstanding public and independent high
school students led by experts in various fields of the sciences and
humanities. Participation in the society promotes independent thinking and a
love of learning while enlarging the students' awareness of career options and
current societal issues and allowing association with many of the other best
students in Jacksonville.”
For more information about Joe Berg Seminar:
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
Won 2011 Digging into Data Grant Challenge
Project Title:
Digging into Human Rights Violations: Anaphora Resolution and Emergent Witnesses
Project description:
Unidentified victims, perpetrators, and details of human rights violations are camouflaged by the scale of archival records of witness reports; keyword based search is insufficient to extract them. Digging into Human Rights Violations will develop an automated reader for large text archives of human rights abuses that will reconstruct stories from fragments scattered across a collection, and an interface for navigating those stories. By improving on anaphora resolution techniques in Natural Language Processing for the connection of pronouns to specific nouns, this system will help researchers and courts reveal witnesses and patterns contained in their own collections. This project will read reports of historic disappearances and systemic violence in Guatemala, of abuse against women and children in Burma, and of violent incidents and rights violations in Chechnya, and provide new methods and free tools for human rights advocates.
Principal Investigators:
Ben Miller (Georgia State University), Karthikeyan Umapathy (University of North Florida), Lu Xiao (University of Western Ontario), George Pullman (Georgia State University), and Saurav Karmakar (Georgia State University).
Grant competition link: http://www.diggingintodata.org/
Grant winners listing:
http://www.diggingintodata.org/Home/AwardRecipients2011/tabid/185/Default.aspx
NSF award link: http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward.do?AwardNumber=1209172
Digging into Human Rights Violations: Anaphora Resolution and Emergent Witnesses
Project description:
Unidentified victims, perpetrators, and details of human rights violations are camouflaged by the scale of archival records of witness reports; keyword based search is insufficient to extract them. Digging into Human Rights Violations will develop an automated reader for large text archives of human rights abuses that will reconstruct stories from fragments scattered across a collection, and an interface for navigating those stories. By improving on anaphora resolution techniques in Natural Language Processing for the connection of pronouns to specific nouns, this system will help researchers and courts reveal witnesses and patterns contained in their own collections. This project will read reports of historic disappearances and systemic violence in Guatemala, of abuse against women and children in Burma, and of violent incidents and rights violations in Chechnya, and provide new methods and free tools for human rights advocates.
Principal Investigators:
Ben Miller (Georgia State University), Karthikeyan Umapathy (University of North Florida), Lu Xiao (University of Western Ontario), George Pullman (Georgia State University), and Saurav Karmakar (Georgia State University).
Grant competition link: http://www.diggingintodata.org/
Grant winners listing:
http://www.diggingintodata.org/Home/AwardRecipients2011/tabid/185/Default.aspx
NSF award link: http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward.do?AwardNumber=1209172
Monday, December 12, 2011
Jacksonville Startup Weekend
This message is for those interested in starting a business or cultivating your entrepreneurial skills. Jacksonville Startup Weekend is an intense 54 hour event that aims to provide foundations for formulating a startup business that focuses on Web and mobile application development. This event will be held on January 20th, 21st, and 22nd at the Student Union Building, University of North Florida. This event is an excellent opportunity to network with local business leaders and investors.
Registration cost for students is $50 (use discount code "STUDENT"). Students must produce a valid student ID at the event.
For more information about the event, see below link:
http://jacksonville.startupweekend.org/
Registration cost for students is $50 (use discount code "STUDENT"). Students must produce a valid student ID at the event.
For more information about the event, see below link:
http://jacksonville.startupweekend.org/
Fall 2011 School of Computing Student Symposium
The School of Computing Student Symposium was held on December 2nd, from 3 PM to 7 PM at the Student Union Building. We had invited community partners, professionals, and industry leaders nearby Jacksonville area. More than 200 people attended the symposium. About 90 students participated with the symposium as presenters.
The symposium had three parallel sessions. Individual project and Team project presentation sessions were held from 3 PM to 5:30 PM. Poster presentations were held from 3 PM to 7 PM. There were 10 project presentations and 25 poster presentations.
Winners of presentation sessions were recognized with cash prizes and certification awards. All student participants were recognized with a certification award. Please visit below link for the details of project works that were recognized by panels of judges as well as based on UNF dollars invested by attendees:
http://www.unf.edu/ccec/computing/news/School_of_Computing_Student_Symposium.aspx
The symposium had three parallel sessions. Individual project and Team project presentation sessions were held from 3 PM to 5:30 PM. Poster presentations were held from 3 PM to 7 PM. There were 10 project presentations and 25 poster presentations.
Winners of presentation sessions were recognized with cash prizes and certification awards. All student participants were recognized with a certification award. Please visit below link for the details of project works that were recognized by panels of judges as well as based on UNF dollars invested by attendees:
http://www.unf.edu/ccec/computing/news/School_of_Computing_Student_Symposium.aspx
Sunday, December 11, 2011
TLO Award for School of Computing Pilot Internship Program
Transformational Learning Opportunities (TLO) proposal for School of Computing Pilot Internship Program was awarded $10,000 to support 10 students. The objective of this TLO is to provide faculty supervised real-world summer internship experiences to School of Computing undergraduate students.
Principal Investigators for this proposal: Karthikeyan Umapathy and Ching-Hua Chuan.
List of 2012 TLO award winners:
http://www.unf.edu/tlo/awards/Round_7.aspx
Principal Investigators for this proposal: Karthikeyan Umapathy and Ching-Hua Chuan.
List of 2012 TLO award winners:
http://www.unf.edu/tlo/awards/Round_7.aspx
Thursday, March 03, 2011
Paper on Professional Associations accepted at the ACM SIGMIS 2011 Conference
Paper Title: Role of Professional Associations in Preparing, Recruiting, and Retaining Computing Professionals
Abstract:
The purpose of this preliminary study is to investigate an under-explored topic, specifically, the role of professional associations in preparing, recruiting, and retaining computing professionals. Drawing on relevant literature, we identified a comprehensive list of services that should be provided by professional associations in order to prepare, recruit, and retain professionals. Then we assessed several computing professional associations to determine whether they offer those identified services. Our findings show that ACM has better coverage of services, followed by IEEE-CS, AITP, and AIS. This study indicates that computing professional associations have considerable influences on higher educational institutes by establishing curriculum guidelines to prepare professionals, on organizations by organizing career fairs and placement websites to recruit professionals, and on retention by providing professional development opportunities. We propose that more research is needed to gain an in-depth understanding of the role of computing professional associations and to identify unique ways they can influence preparation, recruitment, and retention of computing professionals.
Authors: Karthikeyan Umapathy and Albert D. Ritzhaupt
Conference Link: http://www.sigmis.org/CPR_2011_Home_Page.html
Abstract:
The purpose of this preliminary study is to investigate an under-explored topic, specifically, the role of professional associations in preparing, recruiting, and retaining computing professionals. Drawing on relevant literature, we identified a comprehensive list of services that should be provided by professional associations in order to prepare, recruit, and retain professionals. Then we assessed several computing professional associations to determine whether they offer those identified services. Our findings show that ACM has better coverage of services, followed by IEEE-CS, AITP, and AIS. This study indicates that computing professional associations have considerable influences on higher educational institutes by establishing curriculum guidelines to prepare professionals, on organizations by organizing career fairs and placement websites to recruit professionals, and on retention by providing professional development opportunities. We propose that more research is needed to gain an in-depth understanding of the role of computing professional associations and to identify unique ways they can influence preparation, recruitment, and retention of computing professionals.
Authors: Karthikeyan Umapathy and Albert D. Ritzhaupt
Conference Link: http://www.sigmis.org/CPR_2011_Home_Page.html
Paper on Web Service Choreography accepted at the DESRIST 2011
Paper Title: Analyzing Web Service Choreography Specifications Using Colored Petri Nets
Abstract:
Enacting cross-organizational business processes requires critical support for long-running and complex interactions involving multiple participants. The Web Services Choreography Description Language (WS-CDL) aims at facilitating just that, by providing means to describe correlated message exchanges among services geared towards achieving a business goal. While WS-CDL specifications are machine-readable documents, they do not necessarily allow developers to determine—by direct inspection—whether or not the patterns of message exchanges they stipulate do indeed describe the intended service behavior. In this research paper, we show how Colored Petri Nets (CPN) can be used to analyze WS-CDL documents in order to identify faults in the specification. We have developed a research prototype that assists in the creation of a CPN model from a given WS-CDL document. The CPN model generated is then analyzed using the formal verification environment and simulation capability provided by CPN-Tools. We provide a discussion on the analysis of an example WS-CDL document using this approach, as well as on the advantages and limitations of using CPN for analyzing WS-CDL specifications.
Authors: Enrique Caliz, Karthikeyan Umapathy, Arturo J. Sánchez-Ruíz, and Sherif A. Elfayoumy
Conference Link: http://www.desrist2011.uwm.edu/
Abstract:
Enacting cross-organizational business processes requires critical support for long-running and complex interactions involving multiple participants. The Web Services Choreography Description Language (WS-CDL) aims at facilitating just that, by providing means to describe correlated message exchanges among services geared towards achieving a business goal. While WS-CDL specifications are machine-readable documents, they do not necessarily allow developers to determine—by direct inspection—whether or not the patterns of message exchanges they stipulate do indeed describe the intended service behavior. In this research paper, we show how Colored Petri Nets (CPN) can be used to analyze WS-CDL documents in order to identify faults in the specification. We have developed a research prototype that assists in the creation of a CPN model from a given WS-CDL document. The CPN model generated is then analyzed using the formal verification environment and simulation capability provided by CPN-Tools. We provide a discussion on the analysis of an example WS-CDL document using this approach, as well as on the advantages and limitations of using CPN for analyzing WS-CDL specifications.
Authors: Enrique Caliz, Karthikeyan Umapathy, Arturo J. Sánchez-Ruíz, and Sherif A. Elfayoumy
Conference Link: http://www.desrist2011.uwm.edu/
Sunday, January 30, 2011
Paper on SOAP standardization process accepted for publication in the Information Systems e-Business Systems (ISeBM) Journal
Paper Title: Empirical analysis of anticipatory standardization processes: a case study
Abstract:
The processes followed for developing anticipatory standards such as those for web services are still not well-understood. In spite of the openness of the process, there are few analysis that shed light on the roles that different participants play or the actions they engage in during the development of these standards. We analyze archival documents that capture development of SOAP, a core web service standard. Our analysis shows that participants spend a bulk of their time discussing technical issues, identifying action items, and engaging in discussion to reach consensus. These activities reveal prototypical roles that participants take on such as: Advocate, Architect, Bystander, Critic, Facilitator, Guru, and Procrastinator. Together, the findings support the existence of three clusters in standards development processes: design activities performed by Architects, sense-making activities performed by Critics, and managerial activities performed by Facilitators; along with the important activity of coordinating the work of multiple participants. We discuss implications of our findings and identify opportunities for future work.
Note:
For those interested in the "Avatars of Participants in Anticipatory Standardization Processes" book chapter article, instead suggest to read this Information Systems e-Business Management Journal article.
DOI: http://www.springerlink.com/content/p21406677l48k577/
Abstract:
The processes followed for developing anticipatory standards such as those for web services are still not well-understood. In spite of the openness of the process, there are few analysis that shed light on the roles that different participants play or the actions they engage in during the development of these standards. We analyze archival documents that capture development of SOAP, a core web service standard. Our analysis shows that participants spend a bulk of their time discussing technical issues, identifying action items, and engaging in discussion to reach consensus. These activities reveal prototypical roles that participants take on such as: Advocate, Architect, Bystander, Critic, Facilitator, Guru, and Procrastinator. Together, the findings support the existence of three clusters in standards development processes: design activities performed by Architects, sense-making activities performed by Critics, and managerial activities performed by Facilitators; along with the important activity of coordinating the work of multiple participants. We discuss implications of our findings and identify opportunities for future work.
Note:
For those interested in the "Avatars of Participants in Anticipatory Standardization Processes" book chapter article, instead suggest to read this Information Systems e-Business Management Journal article.
DOI: http://www.springerlink.com/content/p21406677l48k577/
Monday, November 29, 2010
Academic Researcher Social Network Search (ArnetMiner)
Researchers from Tsinghua University have developed online researcher and topic profiling tool. Online tool provides following features: profile a researcher's publications including h-index, co-authorship network, link semantic analysis between researcher and topics, ranked list of experts, ranked article listing for journals and conferences, and much more.
However, there are few problems such as missing publications, erroneous citations, author disambiguation, and does not allow Boolean searches for example querying for author name and topic (or) author and affiliation. Despite those problems, ArnetMiner is useful tool with good visualizations.
See for yourself, here it the link:
http://arnetminer.org/index.jsp
However, there are few problems such as missing publications, erroneous citations, author disambiguation, and does not allow Boolean searches for example querying for author name and topic (or) author and affiliation. Despite those problems, ArnetMiner is useful tool with good visualizations.
See for yourself, here it the link:
http://arnetminer.org/index.jsp
Tuesday, November 09, 2010
Computer Magazine Column in November 2010 Issue
A column article on "Systems Integration and Web Services" was published in the Computer magazine November 2010 issues. This column provides overview of outstanding issues that remains to be solved for using Web services technology based solutions for systems integration problems.
See DOI: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/MC.2010.328
See DOI: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/MC.2010.328
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
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Thursday, December 17, 2009
Paper on Collaborative Sensemaking accepted at the CSCW 2010 CIS Workshop
Paper Title: Requirements to support Collaborative Sensemaking
Abstract:
Collaborative sensemaking occurs when a group of people with diverse backgrounds engage in the process of making sense of information rich, complex and dynamic situations. Our understanding of collaborative sensemaking and critical functionalities to support such sensemaking is limited. In this paper, based on review of relevant literature, we outline a set of broad requirements critical for supporting collaborative sensemaking. Requirements identified are: support for creating explicit representations, support co-existence of different representations, support for developing shared representation, support for creating representations using templates, providing workspace for developing shared representations, support for building consensus and reaching agreement, support for facilitating and moderating interactions, support for exchanging documents, and support for retrieving and visualizing information. We argue that a collaborative systems designed to satisfy above requirements would provide better support for collaborative sensemaking activities.
Conference Link: http://workshops.fxpal.com/cscw2010cis/
Abstract:
Collaborative sensemaking occurs when a group of people with diverse backgrounds engage in the process of making sense of information rich, complex and dynamic situations. Our understanding of collaborative sensemaking and critical functionalities to support such sensemaking is limited. In this paper, based on review of relevant literature, we outline a set of broad requirements critical for supporting collaborative sensemaking. Requirements identified are: support for creating explicit representations, support co-existence of different representations, support for developing shared representation, support for creating representations using templates, providing workspace for developing shared representations, support for building consensus and reaching agreement, support for facilitating and moderating interactions, support for exchanging documents, and support for retrieving and visualizing information. We argue that a collaborative systems designed to satisfy above requirements would provide better support for collaborative sensemaking activities.
Conference Link: http://workshops.fxpal.com/cscw2010cis/
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