Recent research has begun to look at interactions between humans and their computers in groups. This line of research focuses on the interaction as the primary unit of analysis by drawing from fields such as psychology, social psychology, and sociology.<ref name="posard2014">{{cite journal|date=2014|title=Status processes in human-computer interactions: Does gender matter?|journal=Computers in Human Behavior|volume=37|pages=189–195|doi=10.1016/j.chb.2014.04.025|last1=Posard|first1=Marek}}</ref><ref name="posardRinderknecht2015">{{cite journal|last2=Rinderknecht|first2=R. Gordon|date=2015|title=Do people like working with computers more than human beings?|journal=Computers in Human Behavior|volume=51|pages=232–238|doi=10.1016/j.chb.2015.04.057|last1=Posard|first1=Marek|doi-access=free}}</ref> | Recent research has begun to look at interactions between humans and their computers in groups. This line of research focuses on the interaction as the primary unit of analysis by drawing from fields such as psychology, social psychology, and sociology.<ref name="posard2014">{{cite journal|date=2014|title=Status processes in human-computer interactions: Does gender matter?|journal=Computers in Human Behavior|volume=37|pages=189–195|doi=10.1016/j.chb.2014.04.025|last1=Posard|first1=Marek}}</ref><ref name="posardRinderknecht2015">{{cite journal|last2=Rinderknecht|first2=R. Gordon|date=2015|title=Do people like working with computers more than human beings?|journal=Computers in Human Behavior|volume=51|pages=232–238|doi=10.1016/j.chb.2015.04.057|last1=Posard|first1=Marek|doi-access=free}}</ref> |