Title
Following the evolution of distributed Communities of Practice
Abstract
Symbiotic computing leads to a proliferation of computing devices that in turn allow linking people, favouring the development of Communities of Practice (CoPs). The notion of Communities of Practice is newer than the social organization it describes, but the emergence of technologies based on the Internet like emails, forums, blogs, wikis, conference calls, video-conference facilitated the creation of a new kind of CoP: the distributed CoP. Distributed CoPs are CoPs whose members being dispersed geographically have to rely strongly on technological means to interact. Distributed CoPs face new issues due to the distance among members, the size of the community and the cultural differences. In this context, coordinating distributed CoPs is even more challenging than coordinating their collocated counterparts. Things that happen rather spontaneously in a collocated community must be instigated in a distributed one, overloading the coordination of distributed CoPs. The increasing role of the coordination should be supported by an adequate set of coordination tools. In this paper we present a tool that aims at supporting the coordination of distributed CoPs. This tool lets the coordination follow the evolution of the community. It analyzes the exchanges among members and shows this information in a graphical format in order to help the coordination to follow the evolution of the participation and the domain of the community.
Year
DOI
Venue
2008
10.1109/COGINF.2008.4639178
Stanford, CA
Keywords
Field
DocType
information networks,Internet,blogs,collocated community,computing device proliferation,conference calls,distributed communities of practice,emails,forums,social organization,video conference,wikis,Agents,Communities of Practice,Distributed Communities of Practice,Multi-Agent Systems,tools for community coordination
Information networks,World Wide Web,Social organization,Computer science,Symbiotic computing,Knowledge management,Multi-agent system,Cultural diversity,The Internet
Conference
ISBN
Citations 
PageRank 
978-1-4244-2538-9
1
0.35
References 
Authors
8
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Gilson Yukio Sato1165.14
Jean-paul Barthes210.35
Kejia Chen317915.82