Author: Kum-Yew Lai

Publications

Publication period start: 1987
Number of co-authors: 7

Co-authors

Number of publications with favourite co-authors
David Rosenblitt
1
Christopher Fry
2
Thomas W. Malone
6

Productive Colleagues

Most productive colleagues in number of publications
Jintae Lee
15
Ramana Rao
18
Thomas W. Malone
34

Publications

Malone, Thomas W., Lai, Kum-Yew, Fry, Christopher (1995): Experiments with Oval: A Radically Tailorable Tool for Cooperative Work. In ACM Transactions on Information Systems, 13 (2) pp. 177-205. https://www.acm.org/pubs/articles/journals/tois/1995-13-2/p177-malone/p177-malone.pdf

Malone, Thomas W., Lai, Kum-Yew, Fry, Christopher (1992): Experiments with Oval: A Radically Tailorable Tool for Cooperative Work. In: Proceedings of the 1992 ACM conference on Computer-supported cooperative work November 01 - 04, 1992, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. pp. 289-297. https://www.acm.org/pubs/articles/proceedings/cscw/143457/p289-malone/p289-malone.pdf

Lai, Kum-Yew, Malone, Thomas W. (1991): Object Lens: Letting End-Users Create Cooperative Work Applications. In: Robertson, Scott P., Olson, Gary M., Olson, Judith S. (eds.) Proceedings of the ACM CHI 91 Human Factors in Computing Systems Conference April 28 - June 5, 1991, New Orleans, Louisiana. pp. 425-426. https://www.acm.org/pubs/articles/proceedings/chi/108844/p425-lai/p425-lai.pdf

Lee, Jintae, Lai, Kum-Yew (1991): What's in Design Rationale?. In Human-Computer Interaction, 6 (3) pp. 251-280.

Lai, Kum-Yew, Malone, Thomas W. (1988): Object Lens: A "Spreadsheet" for Cooperative Work. In: Greif, Irene (eds.) Proceedings of the 1988 ACM conference on Computer-supported cooperative work September 26 - 28, 1988, Portland, Oregon, United States. pp. 115-124.

Lai, Kum-Yew, Malone, Thomas W., Yu, Keh-Chiang (1988): Object Lens: A "Spreadsheet" for Cooperative Work. In ACM Transactions on Information Systems, 6 (4) pp. 332-353.

Malone, Thomas W., Grant, Kenneth R., Lai, Kum-Yew, Rao, Ramana, Rosenblitt, David (1987): Semistructured Messages Are Surprisingly Useful for Computer-Supported Coordination. In ACM Transactions on Information Systems, 5 (2) pp. 115-131.