Vai al contenuto principale della pagina

Collaboration Technologies and Social Computing : 27th International Conference, CollabTech 2021, Virtual Event, August 31 – September 3, 2021, Proceedings / / edited by Davinia Hernández-Leo, Reiko Hishiyama, Gustavo Zurita, Benjamin Weyers, Alexander Nolte, Hiroaki Ogata



(Visualizza in formato marc)    (Visualizza in BIBFRAME)

Titolo: Collaboration Technologies and Social Computing : 27th International Conference, CollabTech 2021, Virtual Event, August 31 – September 3, 2021, Proceedings / / edited by Davinia Hernández-Leo, Reiko Hishiyama, Gustavo Zurita, Benjamin Weyers, Alexander Nolte, Hiroaki Ogata Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Cham : , : Springer International Publishing : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2021
Edizione: 1st ed. 2021.
Descrizione fisica: 1 online resource (126 pages)
Disciplina: 004.019
Soggetto topico: Application software
Social sciences - Data processing
Computer networks
Computer and Information Systems Applications
Computer Application in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Computer Communication Networks
Programari d'aplicació
Ciències socials
Processament de dades
Xarxes d'ordinadors
Soggetto genere / forma: Llibres electrònics
Persona (resp. second.): Hernández-LeoDavinia
Nota di bibliografia: Includes bibliographical references and index.
Nota di contenuto: Intro -- Preface -- Organization -- Contents -- Full Papers -- Automatic Content Analysis of Student Moral Discourse in a Collaborative Learning Activity -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Theoretical Background and Related Work -- 2.1 Ethics and the Relevance of Teaching It -- 2.2 Moral Reasoning -- 2.3 Automated Content Analysis -- 2.4 EthicApp -- 2.5 Ethical Case and Dataset Under Study -- 2.6 Teachers' Role and Cognitive Demands -- 3 Methods for Automated Content Analysis -- 3.1 Clustering of Students' Comments -- 3.2 Most Relevant Topics in Each Cluster -- 3.3 Most and Least Representative Reviews -- 4 Analysis of Students' Responses -- 5 Design of EthicApp Teachers' Dashboard -- 6 Evaluation of Automated Comment Selection -- 6.1 Evaluation of Representative Comments -- 6.2 Estimation of Teachers' Workload -- 7 Conclusions and Future Work -- References -- Effects of Dietary Similarity on Conversational and Eating Behaviors in Online Commensality -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Literature Review -- 2.1 Co-eating Communication -- 2.2 Remote Co-eating -- 2.3 Meal Items -- 3 Method -- 3.1 Participants -- 3.2 Experiment Design -- 3.3 Meal Items -- 3.4 Environment -- 3.5 Procedure of the Experiment -- 4 Data Collection and Analysis -- 4.1 Conversation -- 4.2 Food Intake -- 4.3 Gaze -- 5 Preliminary Results -- 5.1 Conversation -- 5.2 Food Intake -- 5.3 Gaze -- 6 Discussion -- 6.1 Speaking and Eating -- 6.2 Active Conversation During the Meal -- 6.3 Gaze -- 7 Conclusion -- References -- Learning Gains in Pyramid Computer-Supported Collaboration Scripts: Factors and Implications for Design -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Methodology -- 2.1 Collaborative Scripting Tool: PyramidApp -- 2.2 Contexts and Tasks -- 2.3 Variables -- 2.4 Data Analysis -- 3 Results -- 3.1 Learning Gains -- 3.2 (Dis)agreement Measures in Ratings Across the Collaborative Learning Flow.
3.3 On How Results Align with the Expectations -- 4 Discussion: Factors and Implications for Design and Implementation -- 4.1 The Pedagogical Envelope: Prior Activities -- 4.2 The Type of Task -- 4.3 Pyramid Design Elements: Pyramid Levels -- 4.4 The Need for Teacher Intervention: Epistemic Orchestration -- 4.5 Pedagogical Envelope: The Need for Teacher-Led Debriefing -- 5 Conclusions and Future Work -- References -- Emotion Annotation of Music: A Citizen Science Approach -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Platform Design Requirements -- 2.1 ``Ground Truth'' Data for MER -- 2.2 Citizen Science Approach for Collaborators' Recruitment -- 3 Platform Description -- 3.1 Definition of the Annotation Task -- 3.2 Motivations and Incentive Mechanisms -- 3.3 Contributor Environment -- 3.4 A Framework to Assess Outcomes and Usefulness of the Incentives -- 4 User Evaluation and Results -- 4.1 Evaluation Study -- 4.2 Evaluation in Real Conditions -- 5 Conclusions -- References -- Using Network Analysis to Characterize Participation and Interaction in a Citizen Science Online Community -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Analysis Methods -- 2.1 Social Network Analysis -- 2.2 Epistemic Network Analysis -- 3 Analysis Results -- 3.1 Social Networks and Role Dynamics -- 3.2 Epistemic Networks and Discourse Structures -- 4 Discussion -- 5 Conclusions and Future Work -- References -- Work-in-Progress Papers -- Homogeneous Student Engagement: A Strategy for Group Formation During Online Learning -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Methods -- 2.1 Experiment Design -- 3 Results -- 3.1 Pre-existing Knowledge for Each Topic -- 3.2 Learning Achievement and Satisfaction -- 3.3 Student Experience -- 4 Discussion -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- Supporting Peer Evaluation in a Data-Driven Group Learning Environment -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Related Work -- 3 System Design -- 4 Case Study of System Usage.
4.1 Context and Activity Design -- 4.2 Peer Evaluation Data Collected in the System -- 4.3 Initial User Feedback to the System -- 5 Discussion and Future Work -- References -- Multi-party Video Conferencing System with Gaze Cues Representation for Turn-Taking -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Related Work -- 3 Proposed System -- 3.1 Gaze Cues Representation Methods -- 4 Experiment -- 4.1 Experimental Design -- 4.2 Results -- 5 Discussion -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Supporting the Initiation of Remote Conversation by Presenting Gaze-Based Awareness Information -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Related Work and Our Approach -- 3 Proposed System -- 3.1 Hardware Implementation -- 3.2 Software Implementation -- 3.3 Interaction Design -- 4 Evaluation -- 4.1 Experimental Design -- 4.2 Results and Discussion -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- Author Index.
Sommario/riassunto: This volume constitutes the proceedings of the 27th International Conference on Collaboration Technologies and Social Computing, CollabTech 2021, held August/September 2021. Due to VOVID-19 pandemic is was held virtually. The 5 full and 4 work-in-process papers presented in this volume were carefully reviewed and selected from 19 submissions. The papers focus on innovative technical, human and organizational approaches to expand collaboration support including computer science, management science, design science, cognitive and social science.
Titolo autorizzato: Collaboration Technologies and Social Computing  Visualizza cluster
ISBN: 3-030-85071-4
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910495186603321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Serie: Information Systems and Applications, incl. Internet/Web, and HCI, . 2946-1642 ; ; 12856