DocumentCode
296388
Title
Task and time decomposition in electronic brainstorming
Author
Dennis, Alan ; Aronson, Jay ; Heninger, Bill ; Walker, Ed
Author_Institution
Terry Coll. of Bus., Georgia Univ., Athens, GA, USA
Volume
3
fYear
1996
fDate
3-6 Jan 1996
Firstpage
51
Abstract
One aspect of brainstorming that has received little research attention is how the brainstorming task should be presented to the group, whether as one all-encompassing question or as a series of separate questions, each focusing on one aspect of the task. This paper reports the results of an experiment in which groups electronically brainstormed on intact tasks (where all parts of the task were presented simultaneously) or on decomposed tasks (where three subcategories of the task were presented to the groups). We also examined the effects of decomposing the time periods in which groups worked, either using one time period or several shorter ones. Groups in the decomposed task condition generated 40% more ideas, but there were no time effects. We attribute these differences to the ability of task decomposition to refocus members´ attention more evenly across the entire task solution space
Keywords
groupware; human factors; idea processors; all-encompassing question; attention refocusing; decomposed tasks; electronic brainstorming; idea generation; intact tasks; separate questions; task decomposition; task presentation; task solution space; task subcategories; time decomposition; Automatic control; Cognition; Collaborative software; Educational institutions; Humans; Information processing; Problem-solving; Production; Sequential analysis; Social factors;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
System Sciences, 1996., Proceedings of the Twenty-Ninth Hawaii International Conference on ,
Conference_Location
Wailea, HI
Print_ISBN
0-8186-7324-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/HICSS.1996.493176
Filename
493176
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