authors |
Vera, A., Kvan, Th., West, R. and Lai, S. |
year |
1998 |
title |
Expertise and collaborative design |
source |
CHI’98 Conference Proceedings. Los Angeles: ACM, 1998, pp. 503-510 |
summary |
This paper describes the results of a study evaluating the effects of computer mediation on collaboratively solving architectural design problems. Pairs of graduate design students were asked to work on a landscape architecture design problem via computer terminals. In one condition they were allowed to communicate with an electronic whiteboard and a chat-line while in the other; the chat-line was substituted with video-conferencing (real-time video and audio). The protocols were evaluated according to two models. First; they were coded according to the pattern of collaboration; distinguishing meta-planning; negotiation; evaluation; and individual work. No differences were found between the two groups when coded this way. The protocols were also coded in terms of the problem-solving content; distinguishing task-related exchanges; interface-related exchanges; low-level design exchanges; and high-level design exchanges. The results showed that in the bandwidth-limited chat-line condition; participants cut down task and interface-related as well as low-level design exchanges but attempted to maintain the same amount of high-level design exchanges. When the final designs were evaluated by professional architects; no differences were found between two conditions indicating that chat-line participants implicitly compensate for the narrower bandwidth interface. |
keywords |
Cognitive Models; Expertise; Collaboration; CSCW |
series |
other |
email |
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references |
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last changed |
2002/11/15 18:29 |
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