Ming the Mechanic:
Collaborative Patterns

The NewsLog of Flemming Funch
 Collaborative Patterns2004-02-02 15:11
7 comments
picture by Flemming Funch

I'm looking for collaborative patterns. It would be good to catalogue useful ways for people to work together, particularly online. But I don't really easily find much in Google.

There's the excellent Citizen's Science Toolbox geared towards face-to-face groups working on public issues. But how about patterns for online collaboration? Even just simple stuff like: these are the qualities and pros and cons of a chat room, a WIKI, a bulletin board, a weblog. But preferably more comprehensive and in more detail.

While I was looking, I ran into Catalyzation of New Patterns of Collaboration which is an old document from 1992, which is a project proposal to a Collaborative Studies Competition.
The project aims to facilitate the ability to envisage viable configurations of functions based on structures more complex than those reinforced by hierarchical organization charts. It responds to the need for potential collaborators to design "conceptual keystones" essential to the coherence and viability of unforeseen coalition possibilities in difficult situations of governance.

The project focuses initially on the creation or modification of computer software for which an appropriate database is then developed in collaboration with a number of bodies. These tools are then used to provide a "catalytic context" from which new patterns of group and institutional action could emerge. The principal output would not therefore be any form of "report" but rather a piece of software (possibly a prototype). It is the dissemination of this software, ultimately through commercial channels, which would enable many people to explore the tool as a "collaboration enhancing" device. In this sense the real output of the project is new forms of collaboration.

Its claim to originality would lie in its ability to open up (and mid-wife) new and alternative patterns of collaboration -- especially across discipline, faction and cultural boundaries. In creating this device, the purpose of inter-institutional collaboration would be to enrich its scope (as represented by the database) and explore opportunities it opened up (specifically in relation to institutional arrangements for sustainable development).
It aims for some kind of system for cultivating and organizing the awareness of specific patterns, which can be used as conceptual scafolding for specific collaborations.
As with the construction of any building, there is a basic need for "scaffolding" to hold the conceptual and organizational elements in place, especially during the early phases of "imaginative, interdisciplinary" interconnection. It may be argued that it is the lack of this scaffolding feature which prevents many potentially useful initiatives from "getting off the ground" -- and staying up. And the more complex the psych-social structure, and the more communication space it spans, the greater the need for more complex scaffolding.
That's the kind of stuff I'm interested in. I found this on Anthony's Judge's website. He's been instrumental in gathering large amounts of useful information for ages, but I haven't really looked at what he had for years. An enormous amount of stuff there. See for example Documents relating to Paradigm Change, Social Transformation.


[< Back] [Ming the Mechanic]

Category:  

7 comments

5 Feb 2004 @ 09:48 by ming : Collaborative patterns
Maybe a wiki would be a good setting to develop this kind of thing. One could start with a vague framework and add more meat to it along the way.  


6 Feb 2004 @ 15:49 by ming : CollaborationCollaboratory
That looks like a good place to start, so we might as well do it there where there's already something happening.  


8 Feb 2004 @ 14:55 by Julian @62.241.186.129 : wiki
...or maybe that is their mailing lists - hard to tell!  


8 Feb 2004 @ 21:35 by ming : Invitation
I would guess it is just the mailing list. I managed to both register for the site itself, and add a couple of minor things on some pages, so it seems rather open.  


12 Feb 2004 @ 12:19 by John M. LInebarger @134.253.26.11 : I too am interested in collaboration ...
... patterns, and identified four during my dissertation work: Peer-to-peer, Leader-follower, Complementary subgrouping, and Competitive subgrouping. These apply to collaborative product design. Other domains have identified other patterns. Check out http://www.cse.lehigh.edu/~jmlg for more information. Where to go from here?  


12 Feb 2004 @ 14:33 by ming : Collaboration
Interesting site, John. Well, Julian suggested the {link:http://collab.blueoxen.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?CollaborationCollaboratory|Collaboration Collaboratory} site as a place to work on this. Which I think looks good. So maybe it might simply to be to start collecting more of these kinds of models there and see where it takes us.  


10 Mar 2016 @ 16:32 by Mahalia @188.143.232.32 : GCgsoTwpfA
 


Other stories in
2014-11-07 23:12: Welcome to the 5th dimension
2011-11-07 17:22: Notice the incidental
2010-07-14 13:35: Consciousness of Pattern
2010-06-28 00:03: Pump up the synchronicity
2009-10-29 14:03: Convergent or Divergent
2007-08-05 23:45: Perverse incentives
2007-06-22 22:18: Elementary magic
2007-03-21 14:20: Cymatics and group formation
2007-03-15 01:06: Structural holes
2007-02-27 23:50: Leverage



[< Back] [Ming the Mechanic] [PermaLink]? 


Link to this article as: http://ming.tv/flemming2.php/__show_article/_a000010-001087.htm
Main Page: ming.tv