Title: Beyond being there: Techniques to enable geographicallydispersed collaboration
1Beyond being there Techniques to enable
geographically-dispersed collaboration
- Thomas A. FinholtSchool of InformationUniversity
of Michigan
2Outline
- The rise of team science and engineering
- Liabilities of distance
- Leveraging cyberinfrastructure
- Leveraging socio-technical insight
- Cultural challenges
- Coordination challenges
- Summary
31. The rise of team science and engineering
- Complex problems require diverse expertise
- Nanotechnology draws on biology, chemistry,
physics, and engineering - Specialists in these areas are not always
collocated - Phenomena need to be understood and analyzed at
multiple size and temporal scales - From molecules to ecologies
- From microseconds to eons
4Distributed research teams
- Researchers increasingly collaborate with
colleagues elsewhere - NCIBI (Brian Athey et al.)
- MAE Center (UIUC et al.)
- ECC (Victor Li et al.)
- NEES
NCIBI
ECC Technology Network
5The global virtual laboratory
- Leverage worldwide resources
- Expertise
- Labs
- Accelerate communication of findings
- Use cyberinfrastructure to knit together the far
flung collaboration
Good morning, good day, good evening
Image source Enserink, M., Vogel, G. (2003).
Deferring competition, global network closes in
on SARS. Science, 300, 224-25.
6NEJM editorial April 2, 2003
Use of the Internet has sped information
exchange and helped overcome the problems
presented by asynchrony in the activities of
investigators in many time zones. Scientists at
the international collaborating laboratories are
exchanging laboratory results and images on a
secure Web site. Coordination of the
international response strategy has been fostered
by regular videoconferences with senior leaders
in the operations center at the WHO, the DHHS,
and the CDC. Satellite broadcasts, Webcasts, and
videoconferencing are supporting the
dissemination of emerging information to the
entire global health community.
Source http//content.nejm.org/cgi/reprint/NEJMe0
30067v1.pdf
72. Liabilities of distance
- Reduced probability of interaction
- 30-meter rule
- Increased delay
- Distance equals delay
- Lower trust
- Trust requires touch
8The 30-meter rule
Source Allen, T.J. (1977). Managing the flow of
technology in organizations. Cambridge, MA MIT
Press.
9Distance equals delay
Source Herbsleb, Mockus, Finholt Grinter
(2000). Distance, dependencies, and delay in a
global collaboration. In Proceedings of ACM
Conference on Computer-supported Cooperative Work
CSCW 2000. New York ACM Press.
10Trust requires touch
Source Rocco, Finholt, Hofer Herbsleb (2000).
Out of sight, short of trust. Technical report,
Collaboratory for Research on Electronic Work,
School of Information, University of Michigan.
Ann Arbor, MI.
11Distance matters
- Multi-institutional collaborations perform poorly
relative to single institution collaborations - This performance gap reflects the difficulty of
long distance communication and coordination - Technologies exist and are emerging to address
this gap
Source Cummings and Kiesler (2003). KDI
Initiative Multidisciplinary scientific
collaborations. Arlington, VA National Science
Foundation
123. Leveraging cyberinfrastructure
- Network performance doubles every 9 months
- This exceeds the current 18 month doubling rate
of processor performance
Source Stix, G. (2001). The ultimate optical
networks The triumph of the light. Scientific
American, 284, 80-86.
13Michigan LambdaRail
- Dedicated multi-gigabit networking
- Collaborations with national high-performance
networking projects - Ultralight
- OptIPuter
- Internet2
Source W. Scott Gerstenberger, personal
communication.
14Reducing the wizard gap
- Capacity alone wont produce change
- We must identify applications that can take
advantage of high bandwidth networks - While hiding the complexity of advanced networks
from users - Most applications are designed assuming that
networks are slow and scarce - BUT the networks being built today are extremely
fast, have vast capacity, and are increasingly
pervasive
Source Mathis, M. (1999). Pushing up
performance for everyone. Presentation to Joint
Techs, 5 December 1999, Miami, FL.
15Ultra-resolution collaboration
- What if you could see life-sized and detailed
video of distant collaborators? - What if the video was set up in a way that
preserved the ergonomics of face-to-face
interaction? - What if the video was coupled with a giant
electronic canvas for displaying data?
16HD videoconferencing
- Two demonstrations
- iGrid 2005
- SC 2005
- Three prototype installations
- SI North to Palmer Commons
- SI North to CITI
- SI North to NCSA
17iGrid 2005 N-Way HD Video
- Demonstration of multipoint, HD video
conferencing using multicast over regional and
national research networks. - Interactive video conference between iGrid,
University of Washington (organizer) and
University of Michigan - Additional video from University of Wisconsin -
Madison and Keio University - 1.5 Gbps per stream using UW/Research Channel
iHD1500 system
18Optiportals
- Ability to pan and zoom
- Comprehension
- Detail
- Keep track of multiple contexts
- Different views of the same data
- Views of complementary data
Source http//cg.calit2.uci.edu/mediawiki/index.p
hp/Research_Projects_HIPerWall.
194a. Cultural challenges
- First contact
- NEES
- earthquake engineers vs. IT specialists
20Frobisher and the Inuit
21Earthquake engineers in Hofstedes scheme
- Power distance
- Hierarchical
- Bias toward seniority
- Individualist
- My lab is my empire
- Solo PI model
- Masculine
- Adversarial
- Competitive
- Uncertainty avoidance
- Highly skeptical of new technologies
- Extremely risk adverse
22IT specialists in Hofstedes scheme
- Power distance
- Egalitarian
- Bias toward talent
- Collectivist
- Use the Internet to create worldwide communities
- Project model
- Masculine
- Adversarial
- Competitive
- Uncertainty avoidance
- Extremely open to new technologies
- Extremely risk seeking
23 24Agreeing on terms
25How earthquake engineers think
Customer Need
Customer Requirements
Structure Design
Structure Construction
Structure Acceptance
Structure Operations
Customer Needs Assessment
26How IT specialists think
27What three software packages do you use most
frequently in your work?
- Other
- MS Word
- MS PowerPoint
- Statistics applications (e.g., Stata, R, S-Plus)
- SigmaPlot
- PHREEQC
- MathCAD
- FORTRAN compiler
- Mathematica
- GRASS GIS
- Groundwater models
- Modflow
28Pidgins
I dont know how to extract a representation of
the crustal deformation in 4D.
We must re-target the GUI development.
I need to give him the right dataset.
Pidgins are locally and collaboratively developed
languages which enable communication between
disparate communities of practice. Pidgins
serve to coordinate activity between the specific
technical vocabularies of the parties involved
without requiring full translation.
Courtesy of David Ribes
29Boundary Objects
Geoscience Community
Boundary Object
Education
Information Technology
- Boundary Objects both inhabit several
intersecting worlds and satisfy the information
requirement of each of them. Boundary objects are
objects which are both plastic enough to adapt to
local needs and constraints of the several
parties employing them, yet robust enough to
maintain a common identity across sites. They are
weakly structured in common use, and become
strongly structured in individual use. (Star and
Greisemer 1989)
Courtesy of David Ribes
304b. Coordination challenges
- Dispersed teams perform poorly relative to
collocated teams - Performance suffers due to coordination overhead
- More successful dispersed teams adopt explicit
coordination mechanisms
The ideas on this slide are from an NSF report by
Cummings and Kiesler (2003), available
at http//netvis.mit.edu/papers/NSF_KDI_report.pd
f
31Face-to-face meetings (n27)
- Community workshop, November 2000
- NEESgrid site review, December 2000
- NEESgrid site review, March 2001
- NEESgrid kickoff, August 2001
- Awardees meeting, September 2001
- NEES gap meeting, November 2001
- Awardees meeting, December 2001
- NEESgrid site review, March 2002
- NEES national meeting, June 2002
- NEESgrid all hands meeting, August 2002
- UR workshop, October 2002
- Awardees meeting, November 200
- NEESgrid site review, March 2003
- NEES national meeting, May 2003
- Awardees meeting, May 2003
- NEES summit meeting, July 2003
- NEES data workshop, July 2003
- Awardees meeting, September 2003
- NEES data meeting, November 2003
- NEESgrid all hands meeting, November 2003
- NEESgrid site review, January 2004
- NEESgrid integration week, February 2004
- NEES transition meeting, March 2004
- Awardees meeting, March 2004
- NEES national meeting, May 2004
- NEESgrid integration week, July 2004
- 13th World Conference on Earthquake Engineering,
August 2004
32Coordination by travel
33Use of H.323 videoconferencing
NSF LAN meetings
b
c
d
a
UNR Demo
a initial ES-TF meeting b ES-TF meeting time
changed c succession to new ES-TF chair d
change to biweekly ES-TF meetings
345. Summary
- Shared space is not a viable solution for most
interdisciplinary collaborators - Effective use of video and display technology can
approximate the benefits of shared space (e.g.,
ultra-resolution collaboration environments) - Understanding socio-technical issues in long
distance collaboration can help avoid
difficulties - Appreciate and respond to differences in
professional or disciplinary cultures - Develop strategies to accommodate the increased
overhead associated with long distance
collaboration
35Useful URLs
- On videoconferencing etiquette
- http//www.videnet.gatech.edu/cookbook.en/list_top
ics.php?topic6sequence0nameBestPracticesand
Etiquette - On audio conferencing etiquette
- http//cw.conferencing.com/service/ACtips.htm
- On data conferencing etiquette
- http//www.helpmeeting.com/conf_tips.htm