TY - GEN
T1 - Hybrid Collaboration – Moving Beyond Purely Co-Located or Remote Collaboration
AU - Neumayr, Thomas
AU - Saatci, Banu
AU - Augstein, Mirjam
AU - Jetter, Hans-Christian
AU - Klokmose, Clemens Nylandsted
AU - Anderst-Kotsis, Gabriele
AU - Rintel, Sean
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - New collaborative practices and technologies increasingly blur the traditional boundaries between co-located and remote collaboration. Using technologies such as connected interactive whiteboards and mobile devices, team meetings are increasingly partially distributed with co-located and remote members. Collaboration tools such as Slack also invite users to transcend the dichotomy of synchronous and asynchronous team work. In a first attempt to frame this new kind of collaborative practices, Neumayr et al. (2018) have formulated their framework of “Hybrid Collaboration” to enable the description and analysis of current hybrid collaboration practices. Still, there is a considerable knowledge gap in the field of hybrid collaboration although it is daily common practice. This one-day workshop aims at bringing together researchers and practitioners working on empirical research methodologies and currently existing practical use cases of hybrid collaboration while ultimately striving for a high level of usability and UX in the tools we develop in the realm of either co-located or remote collaboration settings.
AB - New collaborative practices and technologies increasingly blur the traditional boundaries between co-located and remote collaboration. Using technologies such as connected interactive whiteboards and mobile devices, team meetings are increasingly partially distributed with co-located and remote members. Collaboration tools such as Slack also invite users to transcend the dichotomy of synchronous and asynchronous team work. In a first attempt to frame this new kind of collaborative practices, Neumayr et al. (2018) have formulated their framework of “Hybrid Collaboration” to enable the description and analysis of current hybrid collaboration practices. Still, there is a considerable knowledge gap in the field of hybrid collaboration although it is daily common practice. This one-day workshop aims at bringing together researchers and practitioners working on empirical research methodologies and currently existing practical use cases of hybrid collaboration while ultimately striving for a high level of usability and UX in the tools we develop in the realm of either co-located or remote collaboration settings.
U2 - 10.18420/ecscw2019_ws3
DO - 10.18420/ecscw2019_ws3
M3 - Article in proceedings
T3 - Reports of the European Society for Socially Embedded Technologies:
BT - ECSCW 2019: Proceedings of the 17th European Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work
ER -