Fraser, MikeHindmarsh, JonBest, KatieHeath, ChristianBiegel, GregGreenhalgh, ChrisReeves, Stuart2020-06-062020-06-06200638930http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10606-006-9027-yhttps://dl.eusset.eu/handle/20.500.12015/3696The design of distributed systems to support collaboration among groups of scientists raises new networking challenges that grid middleware developers are addressing. This field of development work, ‘e-Science’, is increasingly recognising the critical need of understanding the ordinary day-to-day work of doing research to inform design. We have investigated one particular area of collaborative social scientific work – the analysis of video data. Based on interviews and observational studies, we discuss current practices of social scientific work with digital video in three areas: Preparation for collaboration; Control of data and application; and Annotation configurations and techniques. For each, we describe how these requirements feature in our design of a distributed video analysis system as part of the MiMeG project: our security policy and distribution; the design of the control system; and providing freeform annotation over data. Finally, we review our design in light of initial use of the software between project partners; and discuss how we might transform the spatial configuration of the system to support annotation behaviour.e-social sciencegroupwaresynchronous collaborationvideo analysisRemote Collaboration Over Video Data: Towards Real-Time e-Social ScienceText/Journal Article10.1007/s10606-006-9027-y1573-7551