Formal Electronic Conferences (FEC) refers to online meetings for a geographically distributed group of people that are regulated by a rigorous set of rules. FEC technologies enable organizations to replace face-to-face business meetings with trustworthy virtual online meetings. In this paper we present a Robert?s Rules of Order (RRO)-compatible, motion-driven discussion-thread-centered meta-model, which is capable of uniformly modeling formal electronic conference activities. A tailored computerized mechanism, the Collaboration Description Language (CODL) and its runtime environment, is also developed to formalize the model. The CODL virtual machine adds a layer of encapsulation that decouples FEC applications from underlying platforms; therefore, the development of FEC applications will become more reliable, efficient, and secure. Our preliminary experience with this meta-model is also reported.
Index Terms:
Formal electronic conferences, Robert?s Rules of Order, uniformity, meta-model
Citation:
Jia Zhang, Carl K. Chang, Jeff Voas, "A Uniform Meta-Model for Mediating Formal Electronic Conferences," compsac, vol. 1, pp.376-383, 28th Annual International Computer Software and Applications Conference (COMPSAC'04), 2004