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Exploring the nature of virtuality: An interplay of global and local interactions

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Exploring the nature of virtuality: An interplay of global and local interactions. / Panteli, Niki; Chiasson, Mike; Yan, Lin et al.
Virtuality and Virtualization: Proceedings of the International Federation of Information Processing Working Groups 8.2 on Information Systems and Organizations and 9.5 on Virtuality and Society. ed. / Kevin Crowston; Sandra Sieber; Eleanor Wynn. 2007. p. 373-377 (IFIP International Federation for Information Processing; Vol. 236).

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Panteli, N, Chiasson, M, Yan, L, Poulymenakou, A & Papargyris, A 2007, Exploring the nature of virtuality: An interplay of global and local interactions. in K Crowston, S Sieber & E Wynn (eds), Virtuality and Virtualization: Proceedings of the International Federation of Information Processing Working Groups 8.2 on Information Systems and Organizations and 9.5 on Virtuality and Society. IFIP International Federation for Information Processing, vol. 236, pp. 373-377. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-73025-7_26

APA

Panteli, N., Chiasson, M., Yan, L., Poulymenakou, A., & Papargyris, A. (2007). Exploring the nature of virtuality: An interplay of global and local interactions. In K. Crowston, S. Sieber, & E. Wynn (Eds.), Virtuality and Virtualization: Proceedings of the International Federation of Information Processing Working Groups 8.2 on Information Systems and Organizations and 9.5 on Virtuality and Society (pp. 373-377). (IFIP International Federation for Information Processing; Vol. 236). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-73025-7_26

Vancouver

Panteli N, Chiasson M, Yan L, Poulymenakou A, Papargyris A. Exploring the nature of virtuality: An interplay of global and local interactions. In Crowston K, Sieber S, Wynn E, editors, Virtuality and Virtualization: Proceedings of the International Federation of Information Processing Working Groups 8.2 on Information Systems and Organizations and 9.5 on Virtuality and Society. 2007. p. 373-377. (IFIP International Federation for Information Processing). doi: 10.1007/978-0-387-73025-7_26

Author

Panteli, Niki ; Chiasson, Mike ; Yan, Lin et al. / Exploring the nature of virtuality : An interplay of global and local interactions. Virtuality and Virtualization: Proceedings of the International Federation of Information Processing Working Groups 8.2 on Information Systems and Organizations and 9.5 on Virtuality and Society. editor / Kevin Crowston ; Sandra Sieber ; Eleanor Wynn. 2007. pp. 373-377 (IFIP International Federation for Information Processing).

Bibtex

@inproceedings{6fa5d5ee8fe0420fbc8195d0a7d4438f,
title = "Exploring the nature of virtuality: An interplay of global and local interactions",
abstract = "There has been considerable interest in the topic of virtuality over the last few years among both academics and practitioners. The focus of attention has generally been on how to improve collaboration and knowledge sharing, how to develop trust and cohesiveness within virtual organizations, virtual teams and virtual communities, and how to best support virtual interactions. Underlying this research area is the assumption that we possess sufficient understanding about the nature of virtuality and that we know how to distinguish 'what is virtual' to 'what is not virtual'. Even though several of us have attempted on various occasions to make a contribution in this field, we increasingly recognize that the nature of virtuality has not been well conceptualized in the literature. Part of the reason for this is that researchers, including us, often have the tendency to compare the virtual (distributed and CMC-based) to the traditional (collocated, and face-to-face) environment. We question this purely technological distinction, but recognize that virtuality, as an IT-enabled phenomenon, is increasingly extending its reach, becoming more global and more pervasive across all spheres of society. The theme of this panel is to examine, appreciate, and debate the multi-dimensional nature of what virtuality has been, is, and may become-specifically, its global and local dimensions, including the different interpretations that are and should be given to these dimensions.",
author = "Niki Panteli and Mike Chiasson and Lin Yan and Angeliki Poulymenakou and Anthony Papargyris",
year = "2007",
month = jul,
day = "24",
doi = "10.1007/978-0-387-73025-7_26",
language = "English",
isbn = "0387730249",
series = "IFIP International Federation for Information Processing",
pages = "373--377",
editor = "Kevin Crowston and Sandra Sieber and Eleanor Wynn",
booktitle = "Virtuality and Virtualization",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Exploring the nature of virtuality

T2 - An interplay of global and local interactions

AU - Panteli, Niki

AU - Chiasson, Mike

AU - Yan, Lin

AU - Poulymenakou, Angeliki

AU - Papargyris, Anthony

PY - 2007/7/24

Y1 - 2007/7/24

N2 - There has been considerable interest in the topic of virtuality over the last few years among both academics and practitioners. The focus of attention has generally been on how to improve collaboration and knowledge sharing, how to develop trust and cohesiveness within virtual organizations, virtual teams and virtual communities, and how to best support virtual interactions. Underlying this research area is the assumption that we possess sufficient understanding about the nature of virtuality and that we know how to distinguish 'what is virtual' to 'what is not virtual'. Even though several of us have attempted on various occasions to make a contribution in this field, we increasingly recognize that the nature of virtuality has not been well conceptualized in the literature. Part of the reason for this is that researchers, including us, often have the tendency to compare the virtual (distributed and CMC-based) to the traditional (collocated, and face-to-face) environment. We question this purely technological distinction, but recognize that virtuality, as an IT-enabled phenomenon, is increasingly extending its reach, becoming more global and more pervasive across all spheres of society. The theme of this panel is to examine, appreciate, and debate the multi-dimensional nature of what virtuality has been, is, and may become-specifically, its global and local dimensions, including the different interpretations that are and should be given to these dimensions.

AB - There has been considerable interest in the topic of virtuality over the last few years among both academics and practitioners. The focus of attention has generally been on how to improve collaboration and knowledge sharing, how to develop trust and cohesiveness within virtual organizations, virtual teams and virtual communities, and how to best support virtual interactions. Underlying this research area is the assumption that we possess sufficient understanding about the nature of virtuality and that we know how to distinguish 'what is virtual' to 'what is not virtual'. Even though several of us have attempted on various occasions to make a contribution in this field, we increasingly recognize that the nature of virtuality has not been well conceptualized in the literature. Part of the reason for this is that researchers, including us, often have the tendency to compare the virtual (distributed and CMC-based) to the traditional (collocated, and face-to-face) environment. We question this purely technological distinction, but recognize that virtuality, as an IT-enabled phenomenon, is increasingly extending its reach, becoming more global and more pervasive across all spheres of society. The theme of this panel is to examine, appreciate, and debate the multi-dimensional nature of what virtuality has been, is, and may become-specifically, its global and local dimensions, including the different interpretations that are and should be given to these dimensions.

U2 - 10.1007/978-0-387-73025-7_26

DO - 10.1007/978-0-387-73025-7_26

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

AN - SCOPUS:35048831967

SN - 0387730249

SN - 9780387730240

T3 - IFIP International Federation for Information Processing

SP - 373

EP - 377

BT - Virtuality and Virtualization

A2 - Crowston, Kevin

A2 - Sieber, Sandra

A2 - Wynn, Eleanor

ER -