M
Marisa Leavitt Cohn
Researcher at IT University of Copenhagen
Publications - 23
Citations - 292
Marisa Leavitt Cohn is an academic researcher from IT University of Copenhagen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sociotechnical system & Software development. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 22 publications receiving 233 citations. Previous affiliations of Marisa Leavitt Cohn include IT University & University of California, Irvine.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Dynamic reconfiguration in planetary exploration: a sociomaterial ethnography
TL;DR: This paper presents an empirical treatment of entangled and shifting reconfigurations and provides language for engaging with this perspective by presenting three empirical examples from an ethnographic engagement with a NASA mission orbiting an outer planet in the solar system.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Convivial Decay: Entangled Lifetimes in a Geriatric Infrastructure
TL;DR: The empirical case of an aging and obsolescent infrastructure supporting a space science mission that is currently approaching a known end reveals how work of infrastructure maintenance may reach the limits of repair and shift from repair-as-sustaining into a mode of repair-into-decay, actively working towards the end-of-life.
Journal ArticleDOI
What Counts as Software Process? Negotiating the Boundary of Software Work Through Artifacts and Conversation
TL;DR: It is argued that Software Process is a generative system, which participants called “The Conversation,” that emerges out of the interplay between Software Process models and Software Process enactments.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Massively distributed authorship of academic papers
Bill Tomlinson,Joel Ross,Paul André,Eric P. S. Baumer,Donald J. Patterson,Joseph Corneli,Martin Mahaux,Syavash Nobarany,Marco Lazzari,Birgit Penzenstadler,Andrew W. Torrance,David Callele,Gary M. Olson,Six Silberman,Marcus Stünder,Fabio Romancini Palamedi,Albert Ali Salah,Eric Morrill,Xavier Franch,Florian 'Floyd' Mueller,Joseph 'Jofish' Kaye,Rebecca W. Black,Marisa Leavitt Cohn,Patrick C. Shih,Johanna Brewer,Nitesh Goyal,Pirjo Näkki,Jeff Huang,Nilufar Baghaei,Craig Saper +29 more
TL;DR: This work provides the first extensive discussion of the experiential aspects of large-scale collaborative research, and identifies key tools and techniques that would be necessary or useful to the writing process.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
How categories come to matter
TL;DR: A study of users' interactions with Siri found that users work to purify these categories, thus resolving the tensions related to the overlaps, and provides an illustrative case of how categories come to matter in HCI research and design.