Josien Kapma Introduction Web 2.0 tools such as email groups, blogs and wikis facilitate collaboration and sharing between users and offer possibilities to communicate and organize group work where otherwise this would not be possible or prohibitively
Since this publication was released over a decade ago, many technological tools have emerged that have potential to relieve the isolation and combat the lack of mutual time to plan, converse, and reflect that teachers so desperately need. In her article "
Join the InnoCentive Open Innovation community to earn money while solving some of the toughest problems facing the world today
Open Innovation Challenges
In our Open Innovation Marketplace, we have Challenges in a wide variety of disciplines, from Business and Entrepreneurship to Engineering and Life Sciences
Solve any of our Challenges to win awards from $5,000 to $1,000,000. Challenges are posted by Seekers (corporations, government agencies, and nonprofit organizations) who are looking for your help with product development and other business and science problems.
You can use your knowledge and expertise to make a real difference. In addition to listing our Challenges by discipline, our Innovation Pavilions organize Challenges around specific causes or global issues:
* The Rockefeller Foundation
* Clean Tech and Renewable Energy
* Global Health
* Public Policy and Citizens in Action
Each Challenge has a significant cash award associated with it and Solvers have been earning money since 2001 - here's a list of our winning solvers.
In social networks, some individuals interact with more people and more often than others. In this context, one may wonder: under which conditions are social beings willing to be cooperative? Current models proposed in the context of evolutionary game the
• standards and interoperability between platforms • user experience and retention • technological barriers to entry • technological limitations (avatars per sim, etc.) • building community • setting societal standards • creating susta
Walking a neighborhood, study subjects wear a Galvanic Skin Response (GSR), which is a simple indicator of the emotional arousal in conjunction with their geographical location.
A. Back, N. Grau, and K. Tochtermann. Oldenburg Wissenschaftsverlag, Munich, (2008)Collection of articles of several authors / Case studies
Table of Contents : http://www.gbv.de/dms/zbw/556752635.pdf.
A. Back, N. Grau, and K. Tochtermann. Oldenburg Wissenschaftsverlag, Munich, (2008)Collection of articles of several authors / Case studies
Table of Contents : http://www.gbv.de/dms/zbw/556752635.pdf.
L. Backstrom, D. Huttenlocher, J. Kleinberg, and X. Lan. Proceedings of the 12th ACM SIGKDD international conference on Knowledge discovery and data mining, page 44--54. New York, NY, USA, ACM, (2006)