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COOP 2010 is the 9th edition of the International Conference on
Designing Cooperative Systems, being the second European conference
in the field of Computer Supported Cooperative Work after ECSCW.
The conference brings together researchers who contribute to the
analysis and design of cooperative systems and their integration in
organizational community, public and other settings, and their
implications for policy and decision making. Cooperative systems
design requires a deep understanding of collective activities,
involving both artifacts and social practices. Contributions are
solicited from a wide range of domains contributing to the fields
of cooperative systems design and evaluation: CSCW, HCI,
Information Systems, Knowledge Engineering, Multi-agents,
organizational and management sciences, sociology, psychology,
anthropology, ergonomics, linguistics.
COOP 2012 is the tenth COOP conference, marking twenty years from
the first conference in 1992. In this special anniversary edition
we asked researchers and practitioners to reflect on what have been
the successes and the failures in designing cooperative systems,
and what challenges still need to be addressed. We have come a long
way in understanding the intricacies of cooperation and in
designing systems that support work practices and collective
activities. These advances would not have been possible without the
concerted effort of contributions from a plethora of domains
including CSCW, HCI, Information Systems, Knowledge Engineering,
Multi-agent systems, organizational and management sciences,
sociology, psychology, anthropology, ergonomics, linguistics, etc.
The COOP community is going from strength to strength in developing
new technologies, advancing and proposing new methodological
approaches, and forging theories.
COOP 2012 is the tenth COOP conference, marking twenty years from
the first conference in 1992. In this special anniversary edition
we asked researchers and practitioners to reflect on what have been
the successes and the failures in designing cooperative systems,
and what challenges still need to be addressed. We have come a long
way in understanding the intricacies of cooperation and in
designing systems that support work practices and collective
activities. These advances would not have been possible without the
concerted effort of contributions from a plethora of domains
including CSCW, HCI, Information Systems, Knowledge Engineering,
Multi-agent systems, organizational and management sciences,
sociology, psychology, anthropology, ergonomics, linguistics, etc.
The COOP community is going from strength to strength in developing
new technologies, advancing and proposing new methodological
approaches, and forging theories.
COOP 2010 is the 9th edition of the International Conference on
Designing Cooperative Systems, being the second European conference
in the field of Computer Supported Cooperative Work after ECSCW.
The conference brings together researchers who contribute to the
analysis and design of cooperative systems and their integration in
organizational community, public and other settings, and their
implications for policy and decision making. Cooperative systems
design requires a deep understanding of collective activities,
involving both artifacts and social practices. Contributions are
solicited from a wide range of domains contributing to the fields
of cooperative systems design and evaluation: CSCW, HCI,
Information Systems, Knowledge Engineering, Multi-agents,
organizational and management sciences, sociology, psychology,
anthropology, ergonomics, linguistics.
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