The Interdisciplinary Study of Coordination
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Thomas W. Malone, Kevin Crowston
ACM Computing Surveys 26(1), pages 87-119
1994
This survey characterizes an emerging research area, sometimes called coordination theory, that focuses on the interdisciplinary study of coordination. Research in this area uses and extends ideas about coordination from disciplines such as computer science, organization theory, operations research, economics, linguistics, and psychology. A key insight of the framework presented here is that coordination can be seen as the process of managing dependencies among activities. Further progress, therefore, should be possible by characterizing different kinds of dependencies and identifying the coordination processes that can be used to manage them. A variety of processes are analyzed from this perspective, and commonalities across disciplines are identified. Processes analyzed include those for managing shared resources, producer/consumer relationships, simultaneity constraints, and task/subtask dependencies. Section 3 summarizes ways of applying a coordination perspective in three different domains |
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Thomas W. Malone, Kevin Crowston
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published
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article in journal
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1994
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ACM Computing Surveys
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26
— issue
1
— pages
87-119
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— print ISSN
0360-0300