Arts Figurative arts The romanticized notion of a lone, genius artist has existed since the time of
Giorgio Vasari's
Lives of the Artists, published in 1568. Vasari promulgated the idea that artistic skill was endowed upon chosen individuals by gods, which created an enduring and largely false popular misunderstanding of many artistic processes. Artists have used collaboration to complete large scale works for centuries, but the myth of the lone artist was not widely questioned until the 1960s and 1970s. Collaborative art groups include: •
Dada (1913) •
Fluxus (1957) •
Situationist International (1957) •
Experiments in Art and Technology (1967) •
Mujeres Muralistas (1973) •
Colab (1977) •
Guerrilla Girls (1985) •
SITO (1993)
Ballet Ballet is a collaborative art form. It entails music, dancers, costumes, a venue, lighting, etc. Hypothetically, one person could control all of this, but most often every work of ballet is the by-product of collaboration. From the earliest formal works of ballet, to the great 19th century masterpieces of
Pyotr Tchaikovsky and
Marius Petipa, to the 20th century masterworks of
George Balanchine and
Igor Stravinsky, to today's ballet companies, feature strong collaborative connections between choreographers, composers and costume designers are essential. Within dance as an art form, there is also the collaboration between choreographer and dancer. The choreographer creates a movement in her/his head and then physically demonstrates the movement to the dancer, which the dancer sees and attempts to either mimic or interpret.
Music Musical collaboration occurs when musicians in different places or groups work on the piece. Typically, multiple parties are involved (singers, songwriters, lyricists, composers, and producers) and come together to create one work. For example, one specific collaboration from recent times (2015) was the song "
FourFiveSeconds". This single represents a type of collaboration because it was developed by pop idol
Rihanna,
Paul McCartney (former bassist, composer and vocalist for
The Beatles), and rapper/composer
Kanye West. Websites and software facilitate musical collaboration over the
Internet, resulting in the emergence of
online bands. Several awards exist specifically for collaboration in music: •
Grammy Award for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals—awarded since 1988 •
Grammy Award for Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals—awarded since 1995 •
Grammy Award for Best Rap/Sung Collaboration—awarded since 2002 Collaboration has been a constant feature of
electroacoustic music, due to the technology's complexity. Embedding technological tools into the process stimulated the emergence of new agents with new expertise: the musical assistant, the technician, the computer music designer, the music mediator (a profession that has been described and defined in different ways over the years) – aiding with writing, creating new instruments, recording and/or performance. The musical assistant explains developments in musical research and translates artistic ideas into programming languages. Finally, he or she transforms those ideas into a score or a computer program and often performs the musical piece during the concerts. Examples of collaboration include
Pierre Boulez and Andrew Gerzso, Alvise Vidolin and
Luigi Nono,
Jonathan Harvey and Gilbert Nouno.
Classical music Although relatively rare compared with collaboration in popular music, there have been some notable examples of music written collaboratively by classical composers. Perhaps the best-known examples are: •
Hexameron, a set of
variations for solo
piano on a theme from
Vincenzo Bellini's opera
I puritani. It was written and first performed in 1837. The contributors were
Franz Liszt,
Frédéric Chopin,
Carl Czerny,
Sigismond Thalberg,
Johann Peter Pixis, and
Henri Herz. • The
F-A-E Sonata, a
sonata for
violin and piano, written in 1853 as a gift for the violinist
Joseph Joachim. The composers were
Albert Dietrich (first movement),
Robert Schumann (second and fourth movements), and
Johannes Brahms (third movement).
Entertainment Collaboration in entertainment dates from the origin of theatrical productions, millennia ago. It takes the form of writers, directors, actors, producers and other individuals or groups working on the same production. In the twenty-first century, new technology has enhanced collaboration. A system developed by
Will Wright for the TV series title
Bar Karma on CurrentTV facilitates plot collaboration over the
Internet. Screenwriter organizations bring together professional and amateur writers and filmmakers.
Business Collaboration in business can be found both within and across organizations, and examples range from formalised
partnerships, use of
coworking spaces where freelancers can work with others in a collaborative environment and
crowd funding, to the complexity of a
multinational corporation. Inter-organizational collaboration brings participating parties to invest resources, mutually achieve goals, share information, resources, rewards and responsibilities, as well as make joint decisions and solve problems. Collaboration between public, private and voluntary sectors can be effective in tackling complex policy problems, but may be handled more effectively by
boundary-spanning teams and
networks than by formal organizational structures. In turn, business and management scholars have paid much attention to the importance of both formal and informal mechanisms to support inter-organizational collaboration. They especially point to the role of
contractual and relational mechanisms and the inherent tensions between the two. Global manufacturer
Unilever offers to collaborate with innovating
start-up businesses, and its "Unilever Foundry" refers to over 400 examples of "strategic collaboration" in this field. Collaborative
procurement has been commended as a means of achieving financial savings and operational efficiency in the acquisition of common goods and services in the public sector, and producing mutually beneficial results in the private sector. Collaboration allows for better communication within organizations and along
supply chains. It is a way of coordinating different ideas from numerous people to generate a wide variety of knowledge. Collaboration with a few selected firms has been shown to positively impact firm performance and innovation outcomes. Technology has provided the internet, wireless connectivity and collaboration tools such as blogs and wikis, and has as such created the possibility of "
mass collaboration". People are able to rapidly communicate and share ideas, crossing longstanding geographical and cultural boundaries. Social networks permeate business culture where collaborative uses include
file sharing and
knowledge transfer. According to author
Evan Rosen command-and-control organizational structures inhibit collaboration and replacing such structures allows collaboration to flourish. An article by Lee Gomes published in the
MIT Technology Review in 2011 quotes Rosen as saying that star-oriented culture, which is prevalent in American society and in organizations, "inhibits the very collaboration that he maintains can make companies more effective". Studies have found that collaboration can increase achievement and productivity. However, Bill Huber, former chair of the International Association for Contract and Commercial Management (IACCM, now
World Commerce & Contracting), notes that not all companies have what he calls "collaborative DNA". Huber argues that Andrew Cox, formerly of
Birmingham Business School and the founder of the International Institute for Advanced Purchasing and Supply (IIAPS), has highlighted the dangers in thinking that collaborative relationships always produce mutually advantageous "
win-win" outcomes for both buyers and sellers in commercial relationships. Cox uses case studies which show where competent
buyers have used collaboration successful to secure
value for money, and other examples where "incompetent buyers" utilizing "what initially appear to be win-win outcomes" subsequently lose out to "more commercially competent suppliers". In relation to one of his examples, Cox concludes that A four-year study of interorganizational collaboration in a mental health setting found that successful collaboration can be rapidly derailed through external policy steering, particularly where it undermines relations built on trust. Collaboration is also threatened by opportunism from the business partners and the possibility of coordination failures that can derail the efforts of even well-intentioned parties. Margarita Leib, a professor at
Tilburg University in the Netherlands, wrote about how individuals working together sometimes promote dishonest behavior that prioritizes profit, like what
Volkswagen did to fake
vehicle emission levels. This often begins with one person lying, which incentivizes or pressures everyone else to escalate in response.
Education In recent years, co-teaching has become more common, found in US classrooms across all grade levels and content areas. Once regarded as connecting
special education and general education teachers, it is now more generally defined as "…two professionals delivering substantive instruction to a diverse group of students in a single physical space." As American classrooms have become increasingly diverse, so have the challenges for educators. Due to the diverse needs of students with designated special needs,
English language learners (ELL), and students of varied academic levels, teachers have developed new approaches that provide additional student support. In practice, students remain in the classroom and receive instruction by both their general teacher and special education teachers. Teachers increasingly use
collaborative software to establish
virtual learning environments (VLEs). This allows them to share learning materials and feedback with both students and in some cases, parents. Approaches include: •
21st century skills •
Collaborative partnerships •
Collaborative Partnerships: Business/Industry-Education •
Learning circle Writing Writers, both in fiction and non-fiction, may cooperate on a one-time or long-term basis. It can be as simple as dual-authorship or as complex as
commons-based peer production. Tools include
Usenet,
e-mail lists,
blogs and
Wikis while '
brick and mortar' examples include
monographs (books) and periodicals such as newspapers, journals and magazines. One approach is for an author to publish early drafts/chapters of a work on the Internet and solicit suggestions from the world at large. This approach helped ensure that the technical aspects of the novel
The Martian were as accurate as possible. The science fiction author
Frederik Pohl was noted for his longtime collaborations with
Cyril Kornbluth and
Jack Williamson.
Technical communication Collaboration in technical communication (also commonly referred to as technical writing) has become increasingly important in the creation and dissemination of technical documents in multiple technical and occupational fields, including: computer hardware and software, medicine, engineering, robotics, aeronautics, biotechnology, information technology, and finance. Collaboration in technical communication allows for greater flexibility, productivity and innovation for technical writers and the companies they work for, resulting in technical documents that are more comprehensive and accurate than documents produced by individuals. Technical communication collaboration typically occurs on shared document work-spaces (such as Google Docs), through social media sites, videoconferencing, SMS and IM, and on cloud-based authoring platforms.
Science Scientific collaboration rapidly advanced throughout the twentieth century as measured by the increasing numbers of coauthors on published papers. Wagner and
Leydesdorff found international collaborations to have doubled from 1990 to 2005. Collaboration between physicians, nurses, and other health care professionals increases team members' awareness of each other's type of knowledge and skills, leading to continued improvement in decision making. One disadvantage from this development is fragmented supply of health and social services, which hampers integration of services resulting in suboptimal care, higher cost due to overlaps and poor quality of care. The current system, in which care is fragmented and delivered by several different stakeholders, increases the need of all relevant stakeholders to coordinate and collaborate both within and between organisations in order to deliver services tailored to people's needs. This need of increased collaboration between stakeholders corresponds with the principles of people-centered care.
Technology , the
National Science Foundation and the
National Institutes of Natural Sciences for the operation of
ALMA Collaboration in technology encompasses a broad range of tools that enable groups of people to work together including social networking, instant messaging, team spaces, web sharing, audio conferencing, video, and telephony. Many large companies adopt collaboration platforms to allow employees, customers and partners to intelligently connect and interact. Enterprise collaboration tools focus on encouraging
collective intelligence and staff collaboration at the organization level, or with partners. These include features such as staff networking, expert recommendations, information sharing, expertise location,
peer feedback, and real-time collaboration. At the personal level, this enables employees to enhance social awareness and their profiles and interactions Collaboration encompasses both asynchronous and synchronous methods of communication and serves as an umbrella term for a wide variety of software packages. Perhaps the most commonly associated form of synchronous collaboration is web conferencing, but the term can encompass IP telephony, instant messaging, and rich video interaction with telepresence, as well. The effectiveness of a collaborative effort is driven by three critical factors: •
Communication •
Content management •
Workflow The Internet The Internet's low cost and nearly instantaneous sharing of ideas, knowledge, and skills has made collaborative work dramatically easier. Not only can a group cheaply communicate, but the wide reach of the Internet allows groups to easily form, particularly among dispersed, niche participants. An example of this is the
free software movement in software development which produced
GNU and
Linux from scratch and has taken over development of
Mozilla and
OpenOffice.org (formerly known as
Netscape Communicator and
StarOffice). With the recent development of
social media platforms, there has been a constant and quick growth in the use of the Internet for communication and collaboration between people. The
2.0 version of the internet has become a tool for collaborative projects,
blogs,
online communities, social networks, group games. An example of how social media aids in more effective collaboration is seen via the business environment. Communication and collaboration create new hierarchies and wider networks for employees and partners of organisations. Additionally, it also enables businesses to broaden their
marketing strategies by collaborating with
influencers of those social media platforms.
Commons-based peer production Commons-based peer production is a term coined by
Yale Law professor
Yochai Benkler to describe a new model of economic production in which the creative energy of large numbers of people is coordinated (usually with the aid of the internet) into large, meaningful projects, mostly without hierarchical organization or financial compensation. He compares this to firm production (where a centralized decision process decides what has to be done and by whom) and
market-based production (when tagging different prices to different jobs serves as an attractor to anyone interested in doing the job). Examples of products created by means of commons-based peer production include
Linux, a
computer operating system;
Slashdot, a news and announcements website;
Kuro5hin, a discussion site for technology and culture;
Wikipedia, an online
encyclopedia; and
Clickworkers, a collaborative scientific work. Another example is
Socialtext, a software solution that uses tools such as wikis and weblogs and helps companies to create a collaborative work environment.
Massively distributed collaboration The term
massively distributed collaboration was coined by
Mitchell Kapor, in a presentation at
UC Berkeley on 2005-11-09, to describe an emerging activity of
wikis and
electronic mailing lists and
blogs and other content-creating
virtual communities online. ==In war==