%0 Book Section %B Genres on the Web: Computational Models and Empirical Studies %D 2010 %T Problems in the use-centered development of a taxonomy of web genres %A Kevin Crowston %A Kwaśnik, Barbara H. %A Rubleske, Joe %E Mehler, Alexander %E Sharoff, Serge %E Santini, Marina %B Genres on the Web: Computational Models and Empirical Studies %S Series: Text, Speech and Language Technology (Series Editors: Ide, Nancy & Véronis, Jean) %I Springer %C New York %V 42 %8 2010 %@ 978-90-481-9177-2 %& 3 %R 10.1007/978-90-481-9178-9 %> https://crowston.syr.edu/sites/crowston.syr.edu/files/081024%20book%20chapter%20as%20submitted.pdf %0 Conference Paper %B Colloquium on Web Genres, Corpus Linguistics %D 2007 %T Building a Corpus of Genre-Tagged Web Pages for an Information-Access Experiment %A Rubleske, Joe %A Kevin Crowston %A Kwaśnik, Barbara H. %A Chun, You-Lee %B Colloquium on Web Genres, Corpus Linguistics %C Birmingham, UK %G eng %> https://crowston.syr.edu/sites/crowston.syr.edu/files/corpus.longabstract.revised.IV16.pdf %0 Conference Proceedings %B Proceedings of the ISKO Conference %D 2006 %T Challenges in creating a taxonomy for genres of digital documents %A Kwaśnik, Barbara H. %A Chun, You-Lee %A Kevin Crowston %A D'Ignazio, J. %A Rubleske, Joe %B Proceedings of the ISKO Conference %C Vienna, Austria %G eng %> https://crowston.syr.edu/sites/crowston.syr.edu/files/ISKO06abstract.pdf %0 Book Section %B Human-Computer Interaction in Management Information Systems %D 2006 %T Coordination theory: A ten-year retrospective %A Kevin Crowston %A Rubleske, Joe %A James Howison %E Zhang, P. %E Galletta, D. %K Coordination %X Since the initial publication in 1994, Coordination Theory has been referenced in nearly 300 journal articles, book chapters, conference papers and theses. Coordination Theory provides an approach to a core problem in HCI: analyzing group work to suggest alternative approaches involving computer support. Coordination Theory suggests identifying the dependencies between the tasks the different group members are carrying out and the coordination mechanisms the group use to coordinate their work and then considering alternative mechanisms. This chapter will analyze the contribution of this body of research to determine how Coordination Theory has been used for user task analysis and modelling for HCI. Issues that will be addressed include: 1)how the theory has been applied; 2) factors that led to the success of the theory; and 3)identification of areas needing further research. %B Human-Computer Interaction in Management Information Systems %I M. E. Sharpe, Inc. %P 120-138 %G eng %> https://crowston.syr.edu/sites/crowston.syr.edu/files/CT%20Review%20to%20distribute.pdf %0 Conference Paper %B Connections: The 10th Annual Great Lakes Information Science Conference %D 2005 %T Can Genre Metadata Improve Information Retrieval? %A Rubleske, Joe %A Kevin Crowston %A Kwaśnik, Barbara H. %B Connections: The 10th Annual Great Lakes Information Science Conference %C McGill University, Montreal, Quebec %G eng