People and Computers XI 1996
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4471-3588-3_18
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Workspace Awareness in Real-Time Distributed Groupware: Framework, Widgets, and Evaluation

Abstract: The rich person-to-person interaction afforded by shared physical workspaces allows people to maintain up-to-the minute knowledge about others' interaction with the workspace. This knowledge is workspace awareness, part of the glue that allows groups to collaborate effectively. In real-time groupware systems that provide a shared virtual workspace, the possibilities for interaction are impoverished when compared with physical workspaces, partly because support for workspace awareness has not generally been a p… Show more

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Cited by 238 publications
(207 citation statements)
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References 23 publications
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“…CSCW researchers are obviously far from confident with using the term and thus often use the term in combination with different adjectives, e.g., 'general awareness' (Gaver, 1991;Bly et al, 1993, p. 29), 'collaboration awareness' (Lauwers and Lantz, 1990), 'peripheral awareness' (Gaver, 1992;Bly et al, 1993, p. 34;Benford et al, 1994), 'background awareness' (Bly et al, 1993, p. 34), 'passive awareness' (Dourish and Bellotti, 1992, p. 107;Dourish and Bly, 1992, p. 541), 'reciprocal awareness' (Fish et al, 1990;Schmidt, 1994;Robertson, 1997, pp. 19-21, 155-158), 'mutual awareness' (Benford et al, 1994;Schmidt, 1994;Rønby Pedersen and Sokoler, 1997), 'workspace awareness' (Gutwin, 1997;Gutwin and Greenberg, 1999;Gutwin and Greenberg, 2002), etc. The proliferation of adjectives is a clear indication that the term 'awareness' is found to be equivocal, that researchers are aware that the term is being used in significantly different ways, and that it is in need of some qualification to be useful.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…CSCW researchers are obviously far from confident with using the term and thus often use the term in combination with different adjectives, e.g., 'general awareness' (Gaver, 1991;Bly et al, 1993, p. 29), 'collaboration awareness' (Lauwers and Lantz, 1990), 'peripheral awareness' (Gaver, 1992;Bly et al, 1993, p. 34;Benford et al, 1994), 'background awareness' (Bly et al, 1993, p. 34), 'passive awareness' (Dourish and Bellotti, 1992, p. 107;Dourish and Bly, 1992, p. 541), 'reciprocal awareness' (Fish et al, 1990;Schmidt, 1994;Robertson, 1997, pp. 19-21, 155-158), 'mutual awareness' (Benford et al, 1994;Schmidt, 1994;Rønby Pedersen and Sokoler, 1997), 'workspace awareness' (Gutwin, 1997;Gutwin and Greenberg, 1999;Gutwin and Greenberg, 2002), etc. The proliferation of adjectives is a clear indication that the term 'awareness' is found to be equivocal, that researchers are aware that the term is being used in significantly different ways, and that it is in need of some qualification to be useful.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, our group created a flurry of systems illustrating different methods for supporting awareness within a visual workspace, sometimes turning around several different design ideas in a single day. Figure 1 shows two example systems illustrating how people within a group could maintain awareness of others' actions [13,9]. Because we could now try out our ideas, we could quickly determine which ones were worth pursuing and which were not.…”
Section: Toolkits For Real Time Distributed Groupwarementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The problem is that groupware workspaces do not yet afford the richness of interaction available in their physical counterparts. In particular, it is difficult to maintain a sense of workspace awareness: the up-to-theminute knowledge about another person's interactions with the shared workspace [4,5]. One solution provides users with separate awareness windows alongside a conventional full sized viewport.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One solution provides users with separate awareness windows alongside a conventional full sized viewport. These add-on windows supply either an overview of the entire workspace, or a detailed view of what the other person can see [3,4,5]. However, this approach introduces a seam: to gather awareness information, people must attend to and mentally integrate two displays that differ in both scale and physical location.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%