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VREs and the Potential for New Forms of Collaboration. Annamaria Carusi and Marina Jirotka. Why VREs?. Longitudinal study of VREs, in particular JISC Oxford e-Social Science Project Ethical, legal, and institutional dynamics of e-sciences
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VREs and the Potential for New Forms of Collaboration Annamaria Carusi and Marina Jirotka
Why VREs? • Longitudinal study of VREs, in particular JISC • Oxford e-Social Science Project • Ethical, legal, and institutional dynamics of e-sciences • Embedded in larger context of virtual organisations and virtual communities • Focussing on the opportunities for collaboration afforded by VREs
Collaborative work • Collaboration is a major area of research - CSCW, groupware, distributed systems • Work place studies, awareness, public vs private, presence, seamless movement between the real and digital environments • Collaboration and research activities / practices
Methodology • JISC VRE programme as case study • Emerging vision of VREs from the research community themselves • Interviews • Extensive document review • Attendance of workshops • Ethnographic field work • Focus groups and workshops • Analysis
Our focus • Potential for new collaborations in research • Relation between a mode of collaboration and typical research activities • Epistemic practices • Overlapping features across VREs • Four features that participants are responding to positively and that have the potential to re-shape research
Four features • Collaborations formed around new: • objects of research • mappings of objects of research • mappings of interactions • ways of producing, undertaking or performing
Objects of research • Niches of data • Previously excluded • Not part of the canon • Fragile or illegible texts • Canon shapes a discipline • Authoritative, standard-setting list or group of texts or documents
Challenging the canon • Transformative moments in a discipline occur when the canon is contested (eg feminism, post-colonialism) • History of Political Discourse VRE • Marginal texts (unauthorised editions or translations; pamphlets) • Excluded and marginalised texts and documents made available through digitalisation • Re-shapes a research area in a profound way • Accessibilty plus the set of relations created around them – in particular teaching relationships
Shaking up interpretive paradigms • Fragile or illegible texts • Previously geographically dispersed fragments brought together to partially re-construct the document; yet to embody in digital form some of the physical properties that are so important to deciphering their meaning (eg smell, touch) • Implications for collaboration • Inter-disciplinary collaboration between researchers and computer scientists (making visible and legible) • Questioning of ways of conducting interpretation in each discipline
Mappings of objects of research • Access to resources and mapping of the entities or processes that are being studied • Representational or organisational role • Silchester Roman Town • Connects on-site data gathering from the excavation site with collaborative research domains • With ‘picture’ the relevant part of the excavation site
Mapping and knowing • Real spatial disposition of excavation site • Mapping a physical entity • Knowledge management as well as representational role • Organisation and disposition of the map on the screen are not neutral
Mapping interactions • Meetings • Tools and technologies to facilitate meetings • Access Grid with enhancements • MeMeTiC • Screen Streamer (participants can share computer screens) • Compendium: concept mapping tool
Self-reflectiveness • Recording and replay: making ephemeral events persistent or durable • Operating on the events: organising and mapping them • Semantic web tool for search and find disparate content relating to events such as teaching events and conferences: IUGO • Collaborative processes plus ability to analyse and monitor • Self-reflectiveness is intertwined in the process of the interaction • Neutrality of the mode of mapping or formative with respect to the way in which the event is remembered or understood.
‘Doing’ research • Producing, undertaking and performing • Physical interactions with objects within real environments in sciences and in the arts • Performative processes • Multi-sensory • Co-presence with objects • CSAGE - Access Grid with ‘semi-immersive stereoscopic facilities to create an increased level of ‘presence’ within the AG environment’; • Facial reconstruction and performance
Co-defining in action • There is not a pre-defined capability sought; technology and performance are co-define • Feeling of embodied co-location and co-presence • Transfer from performance to other contexts • Facilitates a more naturalistic experience • Naturalism vs artifice
Conclusions • As technologies for research emerge, some research activities are enabled and enhanced, some will be changed and some will recede in the background • Re-shaping of research landscape opens some spaces, closes others • Re-shaping is not value neutral