ECSCW 2019
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ECSCW 2019 | |
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17th European Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work
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Event in series | ECSCW |
Dates | 2019/06/08 (iCal) - 2019/06/12 |
Homepage: | https://ecscw.eusset.eu/2019/ |
Twitter account: | @ECSCW |
Location | |
Location: | Salzburg, Austria |
Papers: | Submitted 58 / Accepted 14 (24.1 %) |
Committees | |
General chairs: | Verena Fuchsberger, Manfred Tscheligi |
Workshop chairs: | Bernhard Maurer, Nervo Verdezoto |
Panel Chair: | Jeff Bardzell, Alan Chamberlain |
Demo chairs: | Thomas Meneweger, Claudia Müller |
PC members: | Mark Ackerman, Gabriela Avram, Rogerio Abreu de Paula, Louise Barkhuus, Matt Bietz, Nina Boulus-Rødje |
Table of Contents | |
Tweets by @ECSCW | |
Topics
- Empirical investigations of collaborative practices. Findings, guidelines, and/or studies related to communication, collaboration, and social technologies, practices, or use.
- System design. How can we support cooperative work in increasingly complex, networked settings? Hardware, architectures, infrastructures, interaction design, technical foundations, algorithms, and/or toolkits that enable the building of new social and collaborative systems and experiences.
- Methodologies and tools. Methods for investigating human practices: the nature of ethnography and the role of other innovative methods and tools in building systems or studying their use.
- Theories. Critical analysis or theory with clear relevance to study or design of collaborative settings and systems.
- Domain-specific social and collaborative applications. Including applications to digital civics, grassroots movements, healthcare, transportation, ICT4D, sustainability, education, accessibility, global collaboration, or other domains.
- Ethics and policy implications. Analysis of the implications of socio-technical systems, the values that inform them, and the algorithms that shape them.
- Crossing boundaries. Studies, prototypes, or other investigations that explore interactions across disciplines, distance, languages, generations, and cultures, to help better understand how to transcend social, temporal, and/or spatial boundaries.
- Design fictions. Discussions and extrapolations of work-practices and technologies, which make a contribution to the core topics of ECSCW. For examples of design fictions from other conferences, please see Proceedings of GROUP 2016 and GROUP 2018 in the ACM Digital Library.