| Abstract | The genre ecology framework is an analytical framework forstudying how people use multiple artifacts – such as 
documentation, interfaces, and annotations – to mediate their 
work activities. Unlike other analytical frameworks, the genre 
ecology framework has been developed particularly for technical 
communication research, particularly in its emphasis on 
interpretation, contingency, and stability. Although this 
framework shows much promise, it is more of a heuristic than a 
formal modeling tool; it helps researchers to pull together 
impressions, similar to contextual design’s work models, but it 
has not been implemented as formally as distributed cognition’s 
functional systems. 
In this paper, I move toward a formal modeling of genre 
ecologies. First, I describe the preliminary results of an 
observational study of seven workers in two different functional 
teams of a medium-sized telecommunications company (a subset 
of a larger, 89-worker study). I use these preliminary results to 
develop a model of the genres used by these two teams, how those 
genres interconnect to co-mediate the workers’ activities, and the 
breakdowns that the workers encounter as genres travel across the 
boundaries of the two teams. I conclude by (a) describing how 
formal models of genre ecologies can help in planning and 
designing computer documentation and (b) discussing how these 
models can be further developed. 
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