Symposium on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work

K. L. Mills

Computer-supported cooperative work (CSCW) holds great importance and promise
for modern society. This paper provides an overview of seventeen papers composing a
symposium on CSCW. The overview also discusses some relationships among the contributions
made by each paper, and places those contributions into a larger context by identifying
some of the key challenges faced by computer science researchers who aim to help us work
effectively as teams mediated through networks of computers.The paper also describes why
the promise of CSCW holds particular salience for the U.S. military. In the context of a
military setting, the paper describes five particular challenges for CSCW researchers.
While most of these challenges might seem specific to military environments, many of you
probably already face similar challenges, or soon will, when attempting to collaborate
through networks of computers. To support this claim, the paper includes a military
scenario that might hit fairly close to home for many of you, and certainly for civilian
emergency response personnel. After discussing the military needs for collaboration
technology, the paper briefly outlines the motivation for a recent DARPA research program
along these lines. That program, called Intelligent Collaboration and Visualization,
sponsored the work reported in this symposium.

