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Cassie B. Barlow

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Publications by Cassie B. Barlow (bibliography)

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1997
 
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Graetz, Kenneth A., Proulx, Nicole, Barlow, Cassie B. and Pape, Laura J. (1997): Facilitating Idea Generation in Computer-Supported Teleconferences. In: Payne, Stephen C. and Prinz, Wolfgang (eds.) Proceedings of the International ACM SIGGROUP Conference on Supporting Group Work 1997 November 11-19, 1997, Phoenix, Arizona, USA. pp. 317-324.

In the current study, 2- and 4-person groups brainstormed ideas for new television shows. Groups then selected and further developed one of their ideas. Three meeting formats were compared: face-to-face, standard teleconferencing, and teleconferencing combined with an electronic brainstorming tool. Results indicated that, although they allocated the same amount of time to the brainstorming phase of the task, groups using the electronic brainstorming tool generated significantly more ideas than groups in the other two conditions. The effectiveness of computer-supported teleconferencing for facilitating distributed groups is discussed.

© All rights reserved Graetz et al. and/or ACM Press

1995
 
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Barlow, Cassie B. and Hammond, Amy J. (1995): Decision Making Processes in Risky and Nonrisky Consumer Product Selection. In: Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society 39th Annual Meeting 1995. pp. 356-360.

Decision making in the domain of risk has traditionally been studied by examining gambling behavior. The control of outcome probabilities obtained in these paradigms masks much of the subjective nature of everyday risk decision choices, such as product selection and information search patterns. A study was undertaken to examine decision making processes in Risky and NonRisky consumer product decision tasks. Subjects completed two Information Display Board (IDB) decision tasks, one selecting a Risky consumer product (oral contraceptive) and one selecting a NonRisky consumer product (toothpaste). The results supported the hypotheses that consumers view the decisions to purchase risky and non-risky products differently and use different patterns of information acquisition in making decisions in the selection of these products. Few anticipated differences were found between Experienced and NonExperienced users of oral contraceptives in information acquisition. Implications for health care professionals providing oral contraceptive information to patients are discussed.

© All rights reserved Barlow and Hammond and/or Human Factors Society

 
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Changes to this page (author)

23 Feb 2010: Modified
26 Jun 2007: Added
28 Apr 2003: Added

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May 22

User error: replace user and press any key to continue.

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