Abstract
The adjective "hybrid" is currently on everyone's lips. When used in combination with meetings, conferences, teaching, or similar endeavors, it usually refers to an activity with both co-located and remote participants. The first case in this theses makes it that the phenomenon is neither novel bor was it historically well-reserached before the years following 2019 brought a tremendous surge of research interest. Most research was traditionally focused on studying either co-located or remote collaboration and the relatively wildly scattered throughout the pool of literature. Accordingly these earlier descriptions are exceptionall hard to identify.
Original language | English |
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Supervisors/Reviewers |
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Publication status | Published - Dec 2023 |
Fields of science
- 102006 Computer supported cooperative work (CSCW)
- 102015 Information systems
- 102016 IT security
- 102020 Medical informatics
- 102022 Software development
- 102027 Web engineering
- 102034 Cyber-physical systems
- 509026 Digitalisation research
- 102040 Quantum computing
- 502032 Quality management
- 502050 Business informatics
- 503015 Subject didactics of technical sciences
JKU Focus areas
- Digital Transformation