processes (Qu and Furnas 2005; Russel et al. 1993).
In this work we present an alternative approach
based on the tag concept, for the usual file manager
systems which traditionally are based in folders. The
next section will present some related work that
address the main concerns that motivate our work.
Section 3 will present our proposed approach. In
section 4 the developed prototype is presented and
we end in section 5 with a discussion of the work
done and pointing some future directions.
2 RELATED WORK
In (Glushko and McGrath 2004) is referred
Document Engineering as an evolving new
discipline for specifying, designing, and
implementing the models of documents that support
information exchange mechanisms to request or
return the results of business processes. The essence
of Document Engineering is the analysis and design
methods that yield precise models that describe the
information these processes require and the rules by
which related processes are coordinated and
combined. Document engineering emphasizes the
use of existing successful best practices in
organization information exchange procedures,
reducing costs and risks while increasing reliability
and interoperability. Nevertheless, this approach
focuses in analyzing and improving or proposes
models to drive the identified information exchange
needs. In our perspective this approach will lack the
flexibility in situations that models lack to support
real life situations information needs and actors will
conduct their information exchange in an
unstructured/unplanned/un-previewed way (the
discussion of a model guidance versus map guidance
in supporting business processes spectrum had feed
several research works e.g. (Schmidt 1997;
Bernstein 2000), but is off the scope of this paper).
In such scenario, to collectively construct and share
information, groups of people have to establish a
shared cognitive and social context against which
they can construct shared meanings of information
(Gasson 2004) . The main processes for sharing tacit
knowledge include socialization and internalization
(Nonaka and Takeuchi 1995). These processes may
face practical difficulties due the absence of explicit
representations of community information and
knowledge structures. User’s and/or group’s
knowledge structures are highly implicit and
invisible to others.
Due the above considerations, our approach
focus, concern in more than sharing documents we
attend to share some associated semantic to expose
their meanings. From (Boland and Tenkasi 1995) the
basic requirements for supporting cross community
knowledge exchanges have been described in the
model of “perspective making – perspective taking”.
Its main proposition is that, enabling knowledge
exchange requires that shared semantic contexts
constructions (perspective making) be made visible
and accessible (perspective taking). Interactions
between individuals are mediated by artifacts such
as diagrammatic models, maps, documents, images,
… named in (Star 1989)(Gasson 2004; Gasson
2005) as “boundary objects” . The meaning retrieval
of such artifacts is of most importance to achieve a
common understanding and promote effective
collaboration.
3 PROPOSED APPROACH
We propose a different perspective of traditional file
explorers’ applications. Inspired by the success of
the social book marking and tagging concepts in a
number of the so called web 2.0 applications, e.g.
Flickr, Delicious, CiteULike, You Tube, … our
proposal consist in the possibility of users tag all
their personal electronic assets. In contrast with
traditional file explorers based on classifying assets
by folders, which is exclusive, tagging is neither
exclusive nor hierarchical and therefore can have
an advantage over hierarchical taxonomies (Golder
and Huberman 2005). Tagging is fundamentally
about sense making. Sense making is a process in
which information is categorized and labeled
through which meaning emerges (Weick 1996).
Consider that one wants to classify this article, this
could be done in several different ways: authors,
research area, keywords
, conference, … In contrast
to the traditional folders approach, we can tag the
article in all the before mentioned categories. Of
course, user can choose if some asset and/or tag will
remain private or be publically available, to
accommodate the appropriate level of privacy.
Nevertheless, when people see benefits that
outweigh risks (e.g. public agendas views,
surveillance cameras…), they voluntarily adjust
their comfort levels by refining privacy and by
establishing new practices and social protocols
(Palen 1999).
We also include in our proposal a sub versioning
server (SVN) to manage assets versions easily. With
this characteristic users can share easier their public
assets and can do operations such as merge
differences from versions or revert to a specific
IMPROVING ORGANIZATIONAL COLLABORATION BASED ON DOCUMENT TAGGING CONCEPT
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