About two weeks ago I attended the fourth GOR (German Online Research) conference in Göttingen, Germany. I'd like to give a brief summary of my impressions and ask for reactions, because an idea formed in my mind during the conference weekend. I remember conversation at and after AIoR about expanding our association, and preferably also organizing a meeting outside the US. I think it would be a great idea to strive for a joint meeting with GOR sometime in the (near) future. About 320 people attended this year's conference, approximately 50% of which were practitioners. To me that was very refreshing. The practitioners bring in applied ideas, different foci, and pointed questions. Most academicians at GOR seemed to have a psychology background, a general orientation that became clear also through the choice of keynote speakers, Katelyn McKenna and Tom Postmes. Most participants were German, but there were also Swiss, Greek, British, at least one Russian, and at least two or three who'd flown in from the States (besides Katelyn and me), and maybe some other nationalities that I didn't catch. The conference, filling two days, always offered four parallel panels lasting 90 minutes, each made up of three 30 minute presentations. Panel topics included Individual Differences Online, E-commerce, Market Research, Basic Research, Learning and Teaching, Web-based Experimentation, and CMC in Organizations. There were also poster sessions. Most sessions were held in German, but during each time slot, there was at least one English presentation. Each panel had a moderator who introduced presenters, encouraged questions, etc. My general impression of the conference was positive. Of course, I speak both German and English, so I probably got more out of the conference than some of the other international guests, but the mix of cultures, and the mix of practitioners and academicians lead to animated discussions, and stimulating ideas. For those who are interested I recommend to take a look at the website (available in both German and English) and the online proceedings at http://www.gor.de I believe both AIoR and GOR can profit from a joint conference. The conference language would probably have to be English, but I know that wouldn't be a problem for the majority of German GOR participants. AIoR and GOR overlap in their focus, which means we can learn from and inspire each other; we can define new problems (and maybe share ideas for solutions) through new perspectives; we can profit from research being done half a globe away and form international research teams. All it takes is willingness to act. I'd like to encourage reactions to my suggestion. I'm perfectly willing to give more details (including names and emails of this year's organizing team at GOR) about the conference, either on the list, or in private emails (ulla@ukans.edu). Is a joint conference with GOR desirable? Is it do-able? Yes and yes in my opinion. What do you think? Thanks, Ulla Bunz Jeremy Hunsinger far away from the office
thanks to Ulla Bunz for both the conference review and for throwing out some ideas for future collaborations. personally, i think the time is right to start thinking hard and creatively about linking up with other organizations, institutions, conferences, etc. i also think the time is right to reach out to a wide array of disciplines, especially outside communications and cultural studies. perhaps this can be one of our goals over the summer? thoughts? david silver http://www.glue.umd.edu/~dsilver On Sun, 3 Jun 2001, jhuns wrote:
About two weeks ago I attended the fourth GOR (German Online Research) conference in G�ttingen, Germany. I'd like to give a brief summary of my impressions and ask for reactions, because an idea formed in my mind during the conference weekend. I remember conversation at and after AIoR about expanding our association, and preferably also organizing a meeting outside the US. I think it would be a great idea to strive for a joint meeting with GOR sometime in the (near) future.
I'd like to think that we've been reaching out...I, for one, have attended ("crashed" is probably the more appropriate term) other disciplinary conferences in Chicago (it's one of the benefits of being in a city with the hotel/convention space for the "big" meetings) and distributed AoIR flyers, met with people, etc. For me, though, what's important is that AoIR's membership is _already_ multidisciplinary. I think that was evident at Kansas, and I suspect it'll be as evident, and then some, at the Minnesota conference. It would be excellent if members in other disciplines (and let's not just confine ourselves to scholarly disciplines but also think about industry, science, and terms other than "discipline" that we use to define what we do and where we think we belong) would assist in, on the one hand, reaching out to colleagues who may benefit from AoIR, and, on the other hand, let us know more about goings-on in their non-AoIR activities that might be of interest to AoIR members. This sort of thing has been happening, of course, and is for me one of the benefits of AoIR. I've learned much about Internet research in domains other than communication and sociology and in other parts of the world. Please, let's keep that up! Sj
thanks to Ulla Bunz for both the conference review and for throwing out some ideas for future collaborations. personally, i think the time is right to start thinking hard and creatively about linking up with other organizations, institutions, conferences, etc. i also think the time is right to reach out to a wide array of disciplines, especially outside communications and cultural studies. perhaps this can be one of our goals over the summer? thoughts?
david silver http://www.glue.umd.edu/~dsilver
On Sun, 3 Jun 2001, jhuns wrote:
About two weeks ago I attended the fourth GOR (German Online Research) conference in Gttingen, Germany. I'd like to give a brief summary of my impressions and ask for reactions, because an idea formed in my mind during the conference weekend. I remember conversation at and after AIoR about expanding our association, and preferably also organizing a meeting outside the US. I think it would be a great idea to strive for a joint meeting with GOR sometime in the (near) future.
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participants (3)
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david silver -
jhuns -
Steve Jones