Research Catalog

Virtual collaboration for a distributed enterprise / Amado Cordova, Kirsten M. Keller, Lance Menthe, Carl Rhodes, Rand Project Air Force, Prepared for the United States Air Force, Approved for public release, distribution unlimited.

Title
  1. Virtual collaboration for a distributed enterprise / Amado Cordova, Kirsten M. Keller, Lance Menthe, Carl Rhodes, Rand Project Air Force, Prepared for the United States Air Force, Approved for public release, distribution unlimited.
Published by
  1. Santa Monica, CA : RAND Corporation, [2013]
Author
  1. Cordova, Amado.

Items in the library and off-site

Filter by

Displaying 1 item

StatusFormatAccessCall numberItem location
Status
Request for on-site useRequest scan
How do I pick up this item and when will it be ready?
FormatBook/TextAccessUse in libraryCall numberUA943 .C66 2013Item locationOff-site

Details

Additional authors
  1. Keller, Kirsten M.
  2. Menthe, Lance.
  3. Rhodes, Carl, 1970-
Description
  1. xi, 29 pages; 28 cm
Summary
  1. The geographic diversity of many military enterprises, along with that of their partners and customers, has made virtual collaboration indispensable for conducting daily operations. Virtual collaboration tools can enable intrasite and intersite collaborative analyses, allow for sites to provide more effective surge capacity, and allow the regional expertise developed at each site to be applied wherever necessary across the enterprise. But communication between non-colocated (virtual) teams poses important challenges, including potential difficulty building cohesiveness and trust among team members and difficulty establishing a common understanding of information or situations. This report addresses these challenges through an assessment of three modes of virtual collaboration, computer-mediated communication, audioconferencing, and videoconferencing, and recommends several ways for intelligence enterprises to tackle them using virtual collaboration tools. These recommendations include: (1) determine which virtual collaboration tools and features are most beneficial using experimental research involving simulated tasks and constraints that closely mirror the military enterprise's operational environment; (2) standardize the lexicon and communications practices associated with virtual collaboration -- chat, in particular -- and train personnel in these practices; and (3) explore the use of videoconferencing in real-time communications between personnel, their partners, and their customers at different sites. In particular, we recommend that Air Force intelligence enterprises consider the use of personal or webcam-based videoconferencing between intelligence personnel located at different sites, as well as between these personnel and remotely piloted aircraft flight crews.
Subject
  1. Communications, Military -- United States
  2. Communications, Military
  3. Military intelligence -- United States
  4. Teleconferencing -- United States
  5. Virtual work teams -- United States
Contents
  1. The need for effective virtual collaboration -- The impact of different types of virtual collaboration on team dynamics and team -- Effectiveness -- Computer-mediated communications -- Use of legacy computer-mediated communications -- Impact of legacy computer-mediated communications on team effectiveness -- Audioconferencing -- Use of audioconferencing -- Impact of audioconferencing on team effectiveness -- Videoconferencing -- Use of videoconferencing -- Impact of videoconferencing on team effectiveness -- Evaluating the performance of virtual collaboration tools -- Conclusions and recommendations.
Owning institution
  1. Harvard Library
Bibliography (note)
  1. Includes bibliographical references.
Processing action (note)
  1. committed to retain