このページのリンク

Trust in Technology: A Socio-Technical Perspective / edited by Karen Clarke, Gillian Hardstone, Mark Rouncefield, Ian Sommerville
(Computer Supported Cooperative Work ; 36)

データ種別 電子ブック
1st ed. 2006.
出版者 (Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer)
出版年 2006
大きさ XXV, 221 p : online resource
著者標目 Clarke, Karen editor
Hardstone, Gillian editor
Rouncefield, Mark editor
Sommerville, Ian editor
SpringerLink (Online service)

所蔵情報を非表示

URL
射水-電子 007 EB0001466 Computer Scinece R0 2005-6,2022-3

9781402042584

書誌詳細を非表示

一般注記 Trust and Organisational Work -- When a Bed is not a Bed: Calculation and Calculability in Complex Organisational Settings -- Enterprise Modeling based on Responsibility -- Standardization, Trust and Dependability -- ‘Its About Time’: Temporal Features of Dependability -- Explicating Failure -- Patterns for Dependable Design -- Dependability and Trust in Organisational and Domestic Computer Systems -- Understanding and Supporting Dependability as Ordinary Action -- The DIRC Project as the Context of this Book
This book encapsulates some work done in the DIRC project concerned with trust and responsibility in socio-technical systems. It brings together a range of disciplinary approaches - computer science, sociology and software engineering - to produce a socio-technical systems perspective on the issues surrounding trust in technology in complex settings. Computer systems can only bring about their purported benefits if functionality, users and usability are central to their design and deployment. Thus, technology can only be trusted in situ and in everyday use if these issues have been brought to bear on the process of technology design, implementation and use. The studies detailed in this book analyse the ways in which trust in technology is achieved and/or worked around in everyday situations in a range of settings - including hospitals, a steelworks, a public enquiry, the financial services sector and air traffic control. Whilst many of the authors here may already be known for their ethnographic work, this book moves on from accounts of 'field studies' to show how the DIRC project has utilised the data from these studies in an interdisciplinary fashion, involving computer scientists, software engineers and psychologists, as well as sociologists. Chapters draw on the empirical studies but are organised around analytical themes related to trust which are at the heart of the authors' socio-technical approach which shows the nuanced ways in which technology is used, ignored, refined and so on in everyday settings
HTTP:URL=https://doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-4258-2
件 名 LCSH:Computer science
LCSH:Sociology
LCSH:Operating systems (Computers)
LCSH:Computers and civilization
LCSH:Electronic data processing—Management
FREE:Theory of Computation
FREE:Sociology
FREE:Operating Systems
FREE:Computer Science
FREE:Computers and Society
FREE:IT Operations
分 類 LCC:QA75.5-76.95
DC23:004.0151
書誌ID EB00000854
ISBN 9781402042584

 類似資料