View
214
Download
0
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
1
Ravi [email protected]
Toward a Theory of Socio-Technical Interactions
Course Portal: http://www.itu.dk/~rkva/2011-Spring-EB22 Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=133258548012
Etherpad: http://ietherpad.com/7y3drhMCnq
Thursday, 10-Mar-2011EB22: Online Marketing: Lecture 17
Auditorium 4, ITU, Copenhagen, Denmark
Trends
2
Participatory Turn of the Internet
Digital Natives vs. Digital Immigrants
Ubiquitous & Pervasive Computing
Digital Positivism
Civic Panopticon
PHENOMENA
Email Newsgroups Online Discussion Forums Web 2.0
Social Networking Sites Social Bookmarking Sites Social Content Sharing Sites Blogs, Microblogs, Wikis etc…
3
UNDERSTANDING THE PHENOMENA
Neither Sociological Determinism Technological Determinism
Mutually Constitutive
Potenially, Each Participant is Both User of the System Resource for Other Users of the System
4
Information and Communications Technologies
5
Human Computer Interaction
Management Information Systems (MIS)
Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW)
Labour Studies
Workplace Studies
Human Computer Interaction Gerlach, J., & Kuo, F. (1991). Understanding human-computer interaction for information systems design. MIS Quarterly, 527-549.
6
Human Computer Interaction Gerlach, J., & Kuo, F. (1991). Understanding human-computer interaction for information systems design. MIS Quarterly, 527-549.
7
Management Information SystemsZhang, P., & Li, N. (2004). An assessment of human–computer interaction research in management information systems: topics and
methods. Computers in Human Behavior, 20(2), 125-147.
8
“Management information systems (MIS) is a community of scholars interested in the development, use, and impact of information technology and systems in social and organizational settings (Zhang & Dillon, 2003).”
HCI Studies in MIS are “‘‘concerned with the ways humans interact with information, technologies, andtasks, especially in business, managerial, organizational, and cultural contexts’’
(Zhang, Benbasat, Carey, Davis, Galletta, & Strong, 2002, p. 334).
Management Information Systems Zhang, P., & Li, N. (2004). An assessment of human–computer interaction research in management information systems: topics
and methods. Computers in Human Behavior, 20(2), 125-147.
9
Management Information Systems Zhang, P., & Li, N. (2004). An assessment of human–computer interaction research in management information systems: topics
and methods. Computers in Human Behavior, 20(2), 125-147.
10
Computer Supported Cooperative Work Carstensen, P.H.; Schmidt, K. (1999). Computer Supported Cooperative Work: New Challenges to Systems Design
Wilson, P. (1991). Computer Supported Cooperative Work: An Introduction. Kluwer Academic.
11
CSCW studies "how collaborative activities and their coordination can be supported by means of computer systems.”
CSCW “combines the understanding of the way people work in groups with the enabling technologies of computer networking, and associated hardware, software, services and techniques.”
Three Central Concerns of CSCW
12
Awareness
Articulation Work
Appropriation
CSCW Matrix
13
Computer Supported Cooperative Work Ackerman, M. (2000). The intellectual challenge of CSCW: The gap between social requirements and technical feasibility. Human-Computer Interaction, 15(2), 179-203.
14
SOCIO-TECHNICAL SYSTEMS
Socio-technical systems involve individuals: (a) interacting with technologies, and (b) interacting with other individuals through technologies
Socio-Technical Systems are not merely about Human Computer Interaction (HCI) – i.e., interacting with technology –
it is also about technological intersubjectivity (TI) – i.e., interacting with people via technology
15
SOCIO-TECHNICAL SYSTEMS
Interacting with Technologies Appropriation of Affordances
Interacting with Others Through Technologies Technological Intersubjectivity
16
SO WHAT?IMPLICATIONS FOR ONLINE MARKETING
Focus should be on the socio-technical interactional realm
The zeitgeist is about lurking, leeching, asking, participating, contributing, sharing, mashing and so on
Understand the compositional practices of online users’ interactional accomplishments
Such an understanding could be crucial to designing informative, entertaining, and effective online ads.
17
REFERENCES
Ackerman, M. (2000). The intellectual challenge of CSCW: The gap between social requirements and technical feasibility. Human-Computer Interaction, 15(2), 179-203.
Barley, S. R., Dutton, W. H., Kiesler, S., Resnick, P., Kraut, R. E., & Yates, J. (2004). Does CSCW need organization theory? Proceedings of the 2004 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work, 122-124.
Gerlach, J., & Kuo, F. (1991). Understanding human-computer interaction for information systems design. MIS Quarterly, 527-549.
Grudin, J. (1988). Why CSCW applications fail: problems in the design and evaluation of organizational interfaces. Proceedings of the 1988 ACM conference on Computer-supported cooperative work, 85-93.
Grudin, J. (2006). Human Factors, CHI, and MIS. Advances in Management Information Systems, 6, 402 - 421 .Vatrapu, R. (2009). Toward a Socio-Technical Theory of Culture. Paper presented at the Culture and Technologies
for Social Interaction Workshop at the 12th IFIP TC13 Conference in Human-Computer Interaction (INTERACT 2009), Uppsala, Sweden, Available at http://lilt.ics.hawaii.edu/~vatrapu/docs/2009-INTERACT-SocioTechnical-Theory-of-Culture.pdf.
Vatrapu, R. (2009). Toward a Theory of Socio-Technical Interactions in Technology Enhanced Learning Environments. In U. Cress, V. Dimitrova & M. Specht (Eds.), EC-TEL 2009, Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS) 5794 (pp. 694-699). Berlin Heidelberg Springer-Verlag.
Zhang, P., & Li, N. (2004). An assessment of human–computer interaction research in management information systems: topics and methods. Computers in Human Behavior, 20(2), 125-147.
18
Discussion
19