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From: riedl@hannibal.cs.umn.edu (John Riedl)
Subject: CSCW '94 Deadline Approaching!
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  ***DON'T FORGET THE SEPTEMBER 6th EARLY REGISTRATION DATE!!!!***

Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW) is a major ACM sponsored
conference in the area of Groupware systems and theory.  Register now
for the early registration discount!  See below for further
information -- and the registration form.

*********************************************************************
This is an abridged version of the Advance Program for CSCW'94. 
The complete version is available via anonymous ftp and on the
world wide web (see below for addresses).  For a physical copy 
of the program, contact:

CSCW'94 Office
CB# 3175, Sitterson Hall
University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3175 USA
Phone: (919) 962-1869 or 962-1780   FAX: (919) 962-1799.  
E-mail: cscw94@cs.unc.edu. 
Anonymous ftp: ftp.cs.unc.edu in directory <pub>, subdirectory <cscw94>
World wide web: Http://www.cs.unc.edu/home.html 
*********************************************************************

			  ADVANCE PROGRAM
	ACM 1994 Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work
			October 22 - 26, 1994
		  Chapel Hill, North Carolina  USA

CONFERENCE OVERVIEW
The theme for this year's conference is "Transcending Boundaries -- 
People, Places, and Time," which suggests that it may be possible to 
build computer-supported environments, as well as a base of 
knowledge, that enable groups to achieve levels of coherence and 
consistency in their work comparable to that achieved by the very 
best individual minds working alone. These environments may also 
help groups overcome limitations of time and place so that 
distributed work can be done almost as readily as work done at the 
same location. We hope this conference will help make this 
possibility a reality. 

The technical program of CSCW '94 consists of:
*  One-day and two-day workshops
*  Half-day and one-day tutorials
*  Parallel sessions of contributed papers
*  Invited plenary sessions by leading experts
*  Panels on issues that are controversial or of current interest
*  Interactive demonstrations of CSCW systems
*  Videos featuring CSCW-related projects

Included in the conference registration are:
*  Plenary, paper and panel sessions
*  Daily continental breakfast, lunch and refreshment breaks
*  Ticket to conference banquet on Monday evening 
*  Conference proceedings


WORKSHOPS 
Saturday, October 22 and Sunday, October 23

Participants will be invited to workshops on the basis of short (3-5 
page) position papers, which should include the authors' experience 
and/or interests in the area and a discussion of the relevant issues. 
Five copies of the position paper should be sent by August 15, 1994 
to the contact person. Invitations will be sent by August 29, 1994. 
Include your name, address, telephone number, e-mail address and 
FAX number in your submission. Unless otherwise stated, each 
workshop will start on Saturday and last one day. The fee for each 
workshop day is $50, which includes continental breakfast, lunch and 
refreshment breaks. A longer description of each workshop is 
available via anonymous ftp at ftp.cs.unc.edu, in directory 
pub/cscw94/Workshops, under the last name of the contact person.

Saturday, October 22
1. Workflow = Office information systems?
Contact:  Dirk E. Mahling, ACM SIGOIS Vicechair
749 Department of Information Science
135 N. Bellefield Street
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA
Phone: (412) 624-5144    FAX: (412) 624-5231
E-mail: mahling@lis.pitt.edu

2. The relationships between CSCW and software process
Contact Person:  Bala Krishnamurthy
2B-140,  AT&T Bell Laboratories
600 Mountain Avenue
Murray Hill, NJ 07974 USA
Phone: (908) 582-7464    FAX: (908) 582-3063
E-mail: bala@research.att.com

3. Collaborative realtime process management 
Contact Person:  Yvonne Waern
Department of Communication Studies
Linkoeping University
S-581 83 Linkoeping, Sweden
Phone: (46) 13 282937   FAX: (46) 13 282299
E-mail: yvowa@tema.liu.se

4. Approaches to work analysis for CSCW systems design
Contact Person:  John A. Hughes
Department of Sociology,
Lancaster University, Bailrigg, Lancaster, UK
Phone: (44) 524-65201 Ext 4174    FAX: (44) 524-594256
E-mail: jhughes@cent1.lancs.ac.uk

5. Critical considerations in the creation and control of 
personal/collective communication spaces
Contact Person:  Andrew Clement
Faculty of Information Studies
University of Toronto
140 St. George Street
Toronto, Ontario Canada M5S 1A1
Phone: (416) 978-3111    FAX: (416) 971-1399
E-mail: clement@flis.utoronto.ca

6. Video-mediated communication: testing, evaluation, and design 
implications
Contact Person:  Kate Finn
SRI International
Menlo Park, CA 94025, USA
Phone: (415) 859-2124   FAX: (415) 859-4812
E-mail: finn@erg.sri.com

7. Where the rubber meets the road: human interaction issues in  
technology supported environments
CContact Person  KC Burgess Yakemovic
4776 Village North Court
Atlanta GA 30338 USA
Phone and FAX: (404) 395-0282
E-mail: kcby@netcom.com

8. The cobbler's children:  How can and should we use CSCW tools in 
our own work?
Contact Person:  Robert R. Halperin
MIT Center for Coordination Science
1 Amherst Street, Bldg. E40-177
Cambridge, MA  02139 USA
Phone: (617) 253-8659   FAX (617) 253-4424
E-mail: RRHALP@MIT.EDU

9. Collaborative hypermedia systems
Contact Person:  Joerg M. Haake
GMD-IPSI
Postbox 104326, D-64293 Darmstadt, Germany 
FAX: (49) 6151-869-818
E-mail: haake@darmstadt.gmd.de

10. Distributed systems, multimedia, and infrastructure support in CSCW
Contact Person:  Atul Prakash
Department of EECS
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2122 USA
Phone: (313) 763-1585
FAX: (313) 763-1503
E-mail: aprakash@eecs.umich.edu

Saturday, October 22 and Sunday, October 23
11. Scenario-based design
Contact Person:  Wendy Mackay
Rank Xerox EuroPARC
61 Regent Street
Cambridge, CB2 1AB UK
Phone: (44) 223-341-502   FAX: (44) 223-341-5110
E-mail:mackay@europarc.xerox.com

Sunday, October 23
12. Software architectures for cooperative systems
Contact Person:  Tom Rodden
Computing Department
Lancaster University
Lancaster LA1 4YR, UK
Phone: (44) 524 593823   FAX: (44) 524 593608
E-mail: tom@comp.lancs.ac.uk


TUTORIALS
Sunday, October 23

Full-day Tutorials
1. Computer supported cooperative work and groupware: A survey of systems
and the behavioral and social issues that affect development and use
Jonathan Grudin, University of California at Irvine
Steven Poltrock, Boeing Computer Services 

2. Designing groupware for realtime collaboration 
Tom Brinck, University of Michigan 
Ralph D. Hill, Bellcore 

3. Working through meetings: A framework for designing meeting support
John L. Bennett, Independent Consultant 
John Karat, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center 

Morning Tutorials
4. Designing and implementing collaborative applications 
Prasun Dewan, University of North Carolina 

5. Applications of distributed hypermedia technology 
Rob Akscyn and Don McCracken, Knowledge Systems

6. Computer support for collaborative learning: theoretical foundations 
Timothy Koschmann, Southern Illinois University
Claire O'Malley, Nottingham University 

7. Ethnography and collaborative systems development 
part 1: Learning to work together
Dave Randall, Manchester University 
Richard Bentley, Rank Xerox Cambridge EuroPARC
Michael Twidale, Lancaster University 

8. "Bifocals" for participatory analysis, design, and assessment of 
work and computer systems 
Michael J. Muller, US WEST Technologies 

9. Computer supported cooperative learning: making it happen 
Starr Roxanne Hiltz and Murray Turoff, New Jersey Institute of Technology 

10. CSCW in the real world: A management information systems 
perspective on CSCW 
M. Lynne Markus and J.D. Eveland, The Claremont Graduate School

Afternoon Tutorials
11. Networking for collaboration: video telephony and media conferencing 
Robert S. Fish, Bellcore 

12. Collaborative writing: practical problems and prospective solutions 
Jolene Galegher and Christine Neuwirth, Carnegie Mellon University 

13. Computer support for collaborative learning: Applications 
Timothy Koschmann, Southern Illinois University 
Claire O'Malley, Nottingham University 

14. Ethnography and collaborative systems development part 2: 
practical application in a commercial context 
Dave Randall, Manchester University 
Richard Bentley, Rank Xerox Cambridge EuroPARC 
Michael Twidale, Lancaster University 

15. Behavioral evaluation of CSCW technologies 
Gary M. Olson, Judith S. Olson, and Tom Finholt, University of Michigan

16. Strategies for encouraging adoption of group technologies 
Susan E. Rudman, US West 
Ellen Francik, Pacific Bell 

17. The law of computer communications and networked communities 
Anne Branscomb, Harvard University 


DEMONSTRATIONS
Monday - Wednesday, October 24-26
CSCW will feature live, interactive demonstrations of novel or 
noteworthy CSCW systems. Included in the demonstrations will be 
various CSCW applications, technologies, research prototypes, and 
commercial products. Demonstrations will be on display continuously 
throughout the conference, as well as during a special 
demonstrations evening on Tuesday, October 25.


VIDEOS
Monday - Wednesday, October 24-26
A videotape program featuring various examples of CSCW-related 
projects will be played continuously at the conference. The program 
features topics relevant to CSCW, such as users working with existing 
groupware tools and with leading-edge research systems that will set 
the standard for future groupware products. Copies of the complete 
video program will be sold at the conference and will also be 
available from ACM as part of the SIGGRAPH Video Review series.


PLENARIES, PAPERS AND PANELS
Monday - Wednesday, October 24-26

Monday, October 24
9:00 - 10:30
OPENING PLENARY

Andrew Grove, President and CEO of Intel Corp.

11:00 - 12:30
PAPERS SESSION A
"From videophoning to video interacting."  Chair: Thomas Moran, Xerox PARC

"Life and death of a videophone: Individual, structural and social 
influences on the use of a new communication medium." Robert E. Kraut, 
Carnegie Mellon University, Ronald E. Rice and Colleen Cool, Rutgers 
University, Robert S. Fish, Bell Communications Research

"Supporting distributed groups with a montage of lightweight 
interactions."  John C. Tang, Ellen A. Isaacs and Monica Rue, SunSoft, Inc.

"GestureCam: Video communication system for sympathetic remote 
collaboration." Hideaki Kuzuoka, University of Tsukuba, Toshio Kosuge, 
Masatomo Tanaka, University of Electro-Communications

PAPERS SESSION B
"Tailoring CSCW systems to organizations."  Chair: Gerardine DeSanctis, 
Duke University

"From implementation to design: Tailoring and the emergence of systematization 
in CSCW."  Randall H. Trigg, Xerox Palo Alto Research Center, Susanne Bodker, 
Aarhus University

"Helping CSCW applications succeed: The under-appreciated role of 
technology mediators." Kazuo Okamura, Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. Ltd.,
Masayo Fujimoto The Sumitomo Research Institute Inc., Wanda J. Orlikowski, 
JoAnne Yates, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

"Exploring obstacles: Integrating CSCW in evolving organizations"
Yvonne Rogers, University of Sussex

2:00 - 3:30
PAPERS SESSION A
"Models of cooperative work." Chair: Terry Winograd, Stanford University

"A conceptual model of groupware." Clarence Ellis, University of Colorado
Jacques Wainer, State University of Campinas

"Situating conversations within the language-action perspective: The 
Milan conversation model."  Giorgio DeMichelis, M. Antoinetta Grasso, 
University of Milano

"The organization of cooperative work: Beyond the 'Leviathan' 
conception of organization."  Kjeld Schmidt, Riso National Laboratory

PAPERS SESSION B
"Workflow and information sharing."  Chair: Clarence Ellis, University 
of Colorado

"Experiences with workflow management: Issues for the next 
generation."  Kenneth R. Abbott, Sunil K. Sarin, XSoft, A Division of Xerox

"Interpreted collaboration protocols and their use in groupware 
prototyping."  Richard Furuta, Texas A&M University, P. David Stotts, 
University of North Carolina

"Experience with the virtual notebook system: abstraction in Hypertext."
Jerry Fowler, Donald Baker, Vram Kouramajian, Hillary Gilson, Ross 
Dargahi and Kevin Brook Long, Baylor College of Medicine

4:00 - 5:30
PAPERS SESSION
"Collaborative editing and reviewing."  Chair: Robert Fish, Bellcore

"Providing computer support for distributed collaborative writing: 
Defining parameters of interaction."  Christine Neuwirth, David Kaufer, 
Ravinder Chandhok and James Morris, Carnegie Mellon University

"Support for synchronous collaboration over a network through 
shared windows."  Atul Prakash and Hyong Sop Shim, University of Michigan

"Duplex: A distributed collaborative editing environment in large scale"
F. Pacull, Alain Sandoz, A. Schiper, Ecole Polytechnique Federale de 
Lausanne, Switzerland

SPECIAL SESSION
"The role of CSCW technology in ad hoc groups."  Session organizer: 
Kate Ehrlich, Lotus Development Corp.  This session will explore the special 
requirements of such groups as conference planning committees, research 
consortia and task forces and will include as one of its examples a report
on the CSCW'94 Program Committee's use of Lotus Notes.


Tuesday, October 25
9:00 - 10:30
PAPERS SESSION 
"Sharing information and creating meaning."  Chair: Saul Greenberg,
University of Calgary

"GroupLens: An open architecture for collaborative filtering of netnews."
Paul Resnick and Mitesh Suchak, Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Neophytos Iacovou, Peter Bergstrom and John Riedl, University of Minnesota

"Computer supported collaborative learning using CLARE: The 
approach and experimental findings."  Dadong Wan, Philip M. Johnson, 
University of Hawaii

"The roles of computers and meaning-making in creating useful summary 
reports."  Barbara Katzenberg, John McDermott, Digital Equipment Corp.

PANEL
"Corporate memory: What does it mean in today's organizations?"
Moderator: Marjorie Horton, EDS 

11:00 - 12:30
PAPERS SESSION A
"Technologies for sharing I."  Chair: Simon Kaplan, University of Illinois

"Real time groupware as a distributed system: Concurrency control 
and its effect on the interface." Saul Greenberg, David Marwood,
University of Calgary

"The use of adapters to support cooperative sharing."  John Mariani, 
Jonathan Trevor and Tom Rodden, Lancaster University

"A flexible object merging framework." Jon Munson, Prasun Dewan, 
University of North Carolina

PAPERS SESSION B
"Studies of cooperative work I."  Chair: Lee Sproull, Boston University

"Augmenting the organizational memory: A field study of answer garden."
Mark Ackerman, University of California

"Steps toward an ecology of infrastructure." Susan Leigh Star, University
of Illinois, Karen Ruhlder, Worcester Polytechnic Institute

"The role of help networks in facilitating use of CSCW tools." J.D. Eveland, 
Anita Blanchard, William Brown, Jennifer Houghton, Claremont Graduate School

12:30 - 1:30
OPTIONAL JOINT SESSION WITH OOPSLA '94
"Incrementally adding objects to products: Versions, multi-media, 
scripting and sharing."  Irene Greif, Lotus Development Corp.
(Dr. Greif will be physically present at the CSCW conference but will 
be giving the opening keynote address for the OOPSLA conference in 
Portland, Oregon, using video and shared data conferencing.)

2:00 - 3:30
PAPERS SESSION A
"Studies of cooperative work II."  Chair: Jonathan Grudin, University of 
California, Irvine

"Working with constant interruption: CSCW and the small office."  John Hughes, 
Mark Rouncefield, Stephen Viller and Tom Rodden, Lancaster University

"The work to make a network work: Studying CSCW in action."  John Bowers,
Manchester University

"The effects of communication modality in computer-mediated small 
group decision-making."  Jozsef A. Toth, University of Pittsburgh

PAPERS SESSION B
"Technologies for sharing II." Chair: Giorgio DeMichelis, University of Milano

"Communication control in computer supported cooperative work 
systems."  Robert Simon, Robert Sclabassi and Taieb Znati, 
University of Pittsburgh

"Session management for collaborative applications."  W. Keith Edwards,
Georgia Institute of Technology

"Integrating communication, cooperation, and awareness: The DIVA 
virtual office environment."  Markus Sohlenkamp, GMD, Greg Chwelos,
University of Toronto

4:00 - 5:30
PLENARY PANEL
"Groupware and global information networks: Friendly mergers or 
competing models?"  Moderator: Terry Winograd, Stanford University

Wednesday, October 26
9:00 - 10:30
PAPERS SESSION A
"Supporting meetings."  Chair: Judy Olson, University of Michigan

"DOLPHIN: Integrated meeting support across liveboards, local and 
remote desktop environments."  Norbert A. Streitz, Jorg Geibler, Jorg M. Haake 
and Jeroen Hol, Gesellschaft fur Mathematik und Datenverarbeitung, Germany

"Meet your destiny: A non-manipulable meeting scheduler."  Eithan Ephrati,
University of Pittsburgh, Gilad Zlotkin, Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Jeffrey S. Rosenchein, The Hebrew University

"Automated assistance for the telemeeting lifecycle."  Neil W. Bergmann, 
J. Craig Mudge, Flinders University

PAPERS SESSION B
"Video conferencing." Chair: Hiroshii Ishii, NTT Human Interface Laboratories

"Multiparty videoconferencing in virtual social distance: MAJIC design." 
Ken-ichi Okada, Fumihiko Maeda, Yusuke Ichikawa and Yutaka 
Jlatsushita, Keio University

"High performance infrastructure for visually-intensive CSCW applications."  
Stephen Zabele, Steven L. Rohall and Ralph L. Vinciguerra, TASC

"A forum for supporting interactive presentations to distributed audiences."
Ellen A. Isaacs, Trevor Morris and Thomas K. Rodriquez, SunSoft, Inc.

11:00 - 12:30
PAPERS SESSION
"Ethnographic methodologies."  Chair: Jeanette Blomberg, Xerox PARC

"The limits of ethnography: Combining social sciences for CSCW." 
Dan Shapiro, Lancaster University

"Moving out from the control room: Ethnography in system design."
John Hughes, Tom Rodden and Val King, Lancaster University,
Hans Andersen, Riso National Laboratory

"Situated evaluation for cooperative systems."  Michael Twidale,
Lancaster University, David Randall, Manchester Metropolitan University
Richard Bentley, Rank Xerox EuroPARC

PANEL
"CSCW in education: Will technology "take off" in K-12 once it's used 
for collaboration?"  Moderator: Irene Greif, Lotus Development Corp.

2:00 - 3:30
CLOSING PLENARY
To be announced


DOCTORAL COLLOQUIUM
Sunday, October 23 - Monday, October 24
This is a new event at CSCW '94. Doctoral students selected to 
participate will spend all day on Sunday and breakfast on Monday in 
a guided, but open, working session with academics and practitioners. 
Participation will be limited to facilitate an open exchange and sharing 
of perspectives, as well as suggestions for students' doctoral research 
in the context of CSCW. The colloquium will precede the conference to 
give participants the opportunity to follow up on new contacts and new 
ideas during the remaining conference activities.

Students interested in applying should submit a 2 - 3 page 
description of their research in progress, and a brief 2 - 3 paragraph 
vita. They should also state their projected completion date for their 
research. Applications must be postmarked no later than August 15, 
1994. Selected participants will be notified by September 1, 1994. 
For more information about the Colloquium, or to submit an 
application, contact:

Barbara Diekmann
Doctoral Colloquium Chair
11797 Flatiron Drive
Lafayette, CO 80026
Phone: (303) 828-3227 (h) / (303) 541-6769 (w)
FAX: (303) 541-8182
E-mail: diekmann@atqm.advtech.uswest.com


CONFERENCE INFORMATION
CSCW'94 will be held at the Sheraton Imperial Hotel and Convention 
Center in Research Triangle Park (RTP), NC.

Conference Banquet
On Monday evening, October 24, enjoy Southern hospitality, music, and
food at the Carolina Club on the campus of the University of North Carolina 
at Chapel Hill. Traditional music will be provided. The cost of this event is 
included in the registration fee.

Transportation
Discount Air Transportation: The local airport is Raleigh-Durham 
International (RDU). Arrangements have been made with American 
Airlines to provide North American conferees with special fares: 5 
percent saving off any published fare, including excursion fares, 
within the United States and Canada (includes the 48 contiguous 
states, Hawaii, San Juan, St. Thomas, St. Croix, Bermuda, and the 
Bahamas). Prices vary according to availability and dates of travel 
and are not valid with any other discounted fares. To make 
reservations, call 1-800-433-1790 and refer to STAR FILE S 1504R5.

Airport Shuttle: The Sheraton and Holiday Inn hotels provide free 
shuttle services to and from RDU International Airport. 

Other Transportation: For train travelers, there are Amtrack stations 
in Raleigh and Durham. Call 1-800-USA-RAIL for information and 
reservations. Drivers may reach the Research Triangle area on 
interstates 40 or 85. The Sheraton and Holiday Inn hotels are located 
on Page Road, a quarter of a mile from Interstate 40, at exit 282. 
Continuous shuttles will run between the two hotels.

Travel Around the Area: Because the Sheraton and Holiday Inn 
hotels are not located on a bus route or within easy walking distance 
to shopping areas, attendees may wish to rent a car from one of the 
rental agencies at RDU International Airport. Parking in many 
parking lots and on streets is free or inexpensive. Parking at both 
hotels is free.

Student Volunteers
We invite students to participate actively in the CSCW '94 conference 
by applying to be student volunteers. Student volunteers will 
contribute to the successful running of CSCW '94 by providing 
essential part-time assistance in all areas of the conference. 
In exchange for working approximately 15 to 20 hours during the 
conference, volunteers will receive complimentary conference 
registration, refreshments, lunches, help in obtaining inexpensive 
accommodations, a copy of the conference proceedings, a conference 
T-shirt, and the opportunity to meet and work with conference 
participants. For an application or more information about the Student 
Volunteers Program, contact:

Eileen Kupstas, Student Volunteers Chair
Computer Science Department
CB #3175, Sitterson Hall
University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3175 USA
Phone: (919) 962-1927   FAX: (919) 962-1799
E-mail: kupstas@cs.unc.edu

ON SALE AT THE CONFERENCE
Purchase the following items at the conference as a souvenir of
your visit to CSCW'94:

T-shirts
Attractive Hanes Beefy T's in Medium, Large, Extra Large, and
XX Large.  Available in natural off-white color and printed 
with the CSCW'94 logo.  $10 each.

Videotapes
The conference videotape includes examples of CSCW-related
projects that are being featured at CSCW'94.  The videotape, which
will be played continuously at the conference for you to preview,
features topics relevant to CSCW, such as users working with
existing groupware tools and with leading edge research systems
that will set the standard for future groupware products.
$50 each.


CONFERENCE REGISTRATION
To qualify for regular rates, your registration form must be faxed or 
postmarked on or before September 6, 1994. Telephone and 
electronic mail registrations will not be accepted.  You may also 
register at the conference. 

Fax or mail a copy of this form along with your payment to:

Mary Ducker
CSCW'94 Registration
Computer Science Department
CB# 3175, Sitterson Hall
University of North Carolina 
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3175 USA
FAX: (919) 962-1799

Payment information
Methods of payment that will be accepted:
*  MasterCard, EuroCard, Visa, American Express
*  travelers check, personal check, company check or money order in 
   U.S. dollars

Please note:
*  Make your check payable to CSCW '94.
*  Purchase orders and government vouchers will not be accepted.
*  Faxed registration forms must be paid for by credit card.
*  Registration forms must be accompanied by full payment. 
*  Telephone and electronic mail registrations will not be accepted. 

Conference fee includes all continental breakfasts, lunches, 
refreshment breaks and the banquet on Monday night.

Personal Information
Name (first, middle initial, last): _____________________________________
Name as you want it to appear on your badge: ____________________________
Company/School: _________________________________________________________
Street Address: _________________________________________________________ 
City/State/Zip: _________________________________________________________
Country: _________________________________________
Phone Number (include country and area codes): __________________________
FAX Number (include country and area codes): ____________________________ 
E-mail address: _________________________________________________________

Registration category
___ Member  ___ ACM   ___ SIGCHI  ___ SIGOIS    ID#: ____________________ 
___ Non-member
___ Student   School ___________________________  ID# ___________________
___ Student Volunteer

___ Will you be accompanied by additional persons?  How many? __________?
    Comments: __________________________________________________________

___ Special Needs: _____________________________________________________ 

___ Include on special mailing list sent to participants prior to 
    conference?

Credit card information
___ Visa  ___ MasterCard/EuroCard  ___ American Express
Credit card number: ______________________________ 
Valid through: __________________________________
Signature: _____________________________________  
Date: ________________

If the name on the credit card is different from the name of the 
attendee, please print the name that appears on the credit card 
below. If the credit card is a company card, please print the billing 
address in the space provided below:

Name: __________________________________________________
Address: _______________________________________________
	 _______________________________________________

Conference fees (in U.S. dollars)

Received by September 6, 1994
			  Member	Non-member	Student 
Conference only	 	  395		475		150
Conf. & 1 tutorial unit	  555		685		245	
Conf. & 2 tutorial units  715		895		340	
1 tutorial unit only	  210		250		 95	
2 tutorial units only	  420		500		190	
Workshop (for 1 full day)  50		 50		 50

Received after September 6, 1994	
			  Member 	Non-member      Student
Conference only		  490		565		150
Conf. & 1 tutorial unit	  715		835		265	
Conf. & 2 tutorial units  940	 	1,105		380	
1 tutorial unit only	  250		300		110	
2 tutorial units only	  500		600		220	
Workshop (for 1 full day)  50		 50		 50

Tutorials
Circle the tutorial(s) of your choice. In the event that your first 
choice is not available, you will be given your second choice. Each 
half-day tutorial counts as one unit. Full-day tutorials count as two units.

First choice	
Full-day    1    2    3
Morning     4    5    6    7    8    9    10
Afternoon  11   12   13   14   15   16    17

Second choice
Full-day    1    2    3
Morning     4    5    6    7    8    9    10
Afternoon  11   12   13   14   15   16    17

Total Fee
Conference fee: _______________  
Tutorials fee:  _______________
Workshops fee:  _______________
Extra banquet tickets (@ $35): __________
Videotape ($50) _______________
T-Shirt ($10) ________  (M   L   XL  XXL)
Total Fee:  ___________________

Conference Rates: Use the Member rates only if you are currently a 
member of ACM, SIGCHI or SIGOIS. Use the Non-member rates if you 
are not a member of ACM, SIGCHI or SIGOIS. Use the Student rates 
only if you are currently a full-time student. You must include your 
school name and student ID number on the registration form. 
Students will be required to present their valid current school ID 
cards at the conference to receive their registration materials.

Deadlines: Registrations that are faxed or received after October 12, 
1994 cannot be acknowledged by the CSCW'94 office. Check with the 
Registration Office when you arrive at the conference.

Refunds: Requests for a refund must be made in writing to the CSCW'94 
office and must be received by October 12, 1994. A $50 cancellation fee 
will be charged to cover the cost of processing refunds. No refund 
requests will be processed after that date. No refund will be given to 
participants who fail to attend or notify the CSCW '94 office prior to the 
refund closing date. Attendee substitutions are allowed. Please contact the 
CSCW '94 office to arrange for substitutions.

For specific questions about registration, contact:
Steve Anderson (SAnderson.chi@xerox.com)


HOTEL REGISTRATION
The Sheraton Imperial Hotel and Convention Center is the conference 
hotel. Hotel arrangements are to be handled by the individual 
directly with the Sheraton. Both the Sheraton and the Holiday Inn, 
which is the overflow hotel for the conference, provide 
complimentary shuttles from Raleigh-Durham Airport.

To reserve a room either:
*  Complete this form, including your credit card number, and fax it 
   to the Sheraton.
*  Phone the Sheraton, identify yourself as a CSCW '94 participant, 
   ask for the conference rate, and provide your credit card number.
*  Mail this form to the hotel along with either your credit card or a 
   check or money order in U.S. dollars for one night's deposit made 
   payable to the Sheraton Imperial Hotel and Convention Center.

Main conference hotel
Sheraton Imperial Hotel and Convention Center
I-40 Exit 282 at Page Road
P.O. Box 13099
Research Triangle Park, NC 27709
Phone: (919) 941-5050
FAX: (919) 941-5156

Overflow hotel
Holiday Inn
I-40 Exit 282 at Page Road
P.O. Box 13816
Research Triangle Park, NC 27709-3816

Note: The Sheraton will make all bookings for conference 
participants, including those at the Holiday Inn, and will send out 
confirmation letters for guests at both hotels. Please do not call the 
Holiday Inn directly to make reservations; the address is only 
provided here for your information. Shuttle buses will run between 
the Sheraton and the nearby Holiday Inn to pick up conference participants.

To qualify for the conference rate you must make your reservation 
by September 14, 1994, or the rates cannot be guaranteed. All rates are 
quoted in U.S. dollars. Hotel parking is free. 

Registration Information
Name (first, middle initial, last): ____________________________________
Company/school: ________________________________________________________ 
Street address: ________________________________________________________
City/State/Zip: ________________________________________________________
Country: ________________________________
Phone Number (include country and area codes): _________________________
FAX Number (include country and area codes): ___________________________
Arrival date & time: ___________________________________________________
Departure date & time: _________________________________________________
Name(s) of other person(s), if shared accommodation: ___________________
________________________________________________________________________

Check your choice of room(s):
__  Single  ($83.00)
__  Double  ($83.00)

Special requests
Smoking _____
Non Smoking ______
Handicap accessible ______
Other_____________________________________________________

Sheraton check in time: 3:00 p.m.  Check-out time: 12:00 noon 

Changes and cancellations 
For all guaranteed room requests, the Sheraton requires an advance 
deposit or a credit card number to guarantee arrival after 4:00 p.m. 
Guests who decide to cancel will receive a refund if they notify the 
Sheraton at least 24 hours prior to arrival.

If time permits, the Sheraton will confirm your reservation and any 
special requests via U.S. mail . Please read your confirmation 
carefully for correct information, including your check-in time.

Credit card information
___ Visa  ___ MasterCard/EuroCard  ___ American Express
Credit card number: ______________________________
Valid through: ___________________________________
Signature: _______________________________________
Date: ________________

If the name on the credit card is different from the name of the
attendee, please print the name that appears on the credit card
below. If the credit card is a company card, please print the billing
address in the space provided below:

Name: __________________________________________________
Address: _______________________________________________
         _______________________________________________


CONFERENCE COMMITTEE
Conference Co-Chairs	
John B. Smith, University of North Carolina 
F. Don Smith, IBM

Program Chair
Thomas W. Malone, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Panels Chair
Irene Greif, Lotus Development Corporation

Tutorials Chair	
Lee Sproull, Boston University

Workshops Chair	
Prasun Dewan, University of North Carolina

Videos Co-Chairs
Beverly Harrison, University of Toronto
Saul Greenberg, University of Calgary

Demonstrations Chair
Kevin Jeffay, University of North Carolina

Doctoral Colloquium Chair
Barbara Diekmann, US West Technologies & University of Colorado at Boulder

Treasurer	
David Stotts, University of North Carolina

Promotion Chair	
John Riedl, University of Minnesota

Proceedings Co-Chairs	
Richard Furuta, Texas A & M University
Christine Neuwirth, Carnegie Mellon University

Registration Chair
Steve Anderson, Lawrence Livermore National Labs

Industrial Liaison	
Nicole Yankelovich, Sun Microsystems

European Liaison
Tom Rodden, Lancaster University

Asian Liaison	
Hiroshi Ishii, NTT Human Interface Laboratories

SIGCHI Liaison	
Dianne Murray, University of Surrey

SIGOIS Liaison	
Carson Woo, University of British Columbia

ACM Liaison
Diane Darrow, ACM

Communications Infrastructure Chair	
Peggy Montgomery, MCNC

Audio-Visual Chair	
Brian Ladd, University of North Carolina

Student Volunteers Chair
Eileen Kupstas, University of North Carolina

Conference Advisor
Marilyn Mantei, University of Toronto

Conference Coordinator	
Mary Ducker, Consultant

Conference Secretary
Claire Gingell, University of North Carolina


PROGRAM COMMITTEE
CHAIR
Thomas W. Malone, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
ASSOCIATE CHAIRS
Gerardine L. DeSanctis, Duke University
Robert S. Fish, Bellcore
Hiroshi Ishii, NTT Human Interface Laboratories
Simon Kaplan, University of Illinois
Judith Olson, University of Michigan
Mark Weiser, Xerox PARC
ASSOCIATE CHAIR FOR COMPUTER-AIDED REVIEW ASSIGNMENT
Susan T. Dumais, Bellcore
COMMITTEE MEMBERS
Liam J. Bannon, University of Limerick
Tora K. Bikson, RAND Corporation
Jeanette L. Blomberg, Xerox PARC
Sara Bly, Xerox PARC
Daniel G. Bobrow, Xerox PARC
Nathaniel S. Borenstein, Bellcore
John Bowers, University of Manchester
Erik Brynjolfsson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Claudio U. Ciborra, Theseus Institute
Jeff Conklin, Corporate Memory Systems, Inc.
Kevin Crowston, University of Michigan
Bill Curtis, Carnegie Mellon University
Giorgio De Michelis, University of Milano
Prasun Dewan, University of North Carolina
Edmund H. Durfee, University of Michigan
Clarence (Skip) Ellis, University of Colorado
Thomas A. Finholt, University of Michigan
Jolene Galegher, Carnegie Mellon University
William Gaver, Rank Xerox Cambridge EuroPARC
Michael R. Genesereth, Stanford University
Saul Greenberg, University of Calgary
Jonathan Grudin, University of California, Irvine
James D. Hollan, University of New Mexico
Brewster Kahle, Wide Area Information Servers, Inc.
John L. King, University of California, Irvine
Robert E. Kraut, Carnegie Mellon University
Morten Kyng, Aarhus University
John Ledyard, California Institute of Technology
Jintae Lee, University of Hawaii
Wendy Mackay, Rank Xerox Cambridge EuroPARC
Marilyn Mantei, University of Toronto
M. Lynne Markus, Claremont Graduate School
Naomi Miyake, Chukyo University
Thomas P. Moran, Xerox PARC
James H. Morris, Carnegie Mellon University
Bonnie A. Nardi, Apple Computer
Robert Neches, University of Southern California
Christine M. Neuwirth, Carnegie Mellon University
Jay Nunamaker, University of Arizona
Gary M. Olson, University of Michigan
Wanda J. Orlikowski, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Joseph Pasquale, University of California at San Diego
Steven Poltrock, Boeing Computer Services
Atul Prakash, University of Michigan
Stephen Reder, Northwest Regional Educational Laboratory
Paul Resnick, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
John Riedl, University of Minnesota
Mike Robinson, GMD-I3, Germany
Tom Rodden, Lancaster University
Chris Schmandt, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Kjeld Schmidt, Riso National Laboratory
Lee Sproull, Boston University
John C. Tang, SunSoft, Inc.
Terry Winograd, Stanford University
Stanley B. Zdonik, Brown University


CORPORATE SPONSORS
Lotus Development Corporation
Intel Corporation
Sun Microsystems, Inc.


CSCW '94 is sponsored by the Association for Computing Machinery 
Special Interest Group on Computer-Human Interaction (SIGCHI) and 
the Special Interest Group on Office Information Systems (SIGOIS).

--
John Riedl			riedl@cs.umn.edu
Assistant Professor		University of Minnesota Computer Science

