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- | 443 | ||
- | CHAPTER 14 | ||
- | Theories of ComputerMediated Communication | ||
- | and Interpersonal Relations | ||
- | Joseph B. Walther | ||
- | Computer-mediated communication (CMC) | ||
- | systems, in a variety of forms, have | ||
- | become integral to the initiation, development, | ||
- | and maintenance of interpersonal relationships. | ||
- | They are involved in the subtle shaping | ||
- | of communication in almost every relational | ||
- | context. We may observe or participate in the | ||
- | conversations of huge numbers of social actors, | ||
- | from the Twitter messages of experts we have | ||
- | never met to one’s family’s blog and from messaging | ||
- | a barely acquainted Facebook friend to | ||
- | coordinating with one’s spouse through texting | ||
- | about who will pick up the kids that day or saying | ||
- | via e-mail that one is sorry about the fight | ||
- | they had that morning. Individuals exploit the | ||
- | features of these media to make their best impression | ||
- | and attract attention or to ward off undesired | ||
- | contacts (Tong & Walther, 2011a). We | ||
- | continually form and re-form our impressions | ||
- | and evaluations of others online, from deciding | ||
- | whose recommendations to trust in discussion | ||
- | boards (Van Der Heide, 2008) to evaluating the | ||
- | friend who portrays himself online in a not quite | ||
- | accurate way (DeAndrea & Walther, in press). | ||
- | Although many people perceive that social media | ||
- | messages are trivial and banal, so is the stuff by | ||
- | which relationships are maintained (Duck, Rutt, | ||
- | Hurst, & Strejc, 1991; Tong & Walther, 2011b). | ||
- | The ubiquity of CMC is not sufficient impetus | ||
- | for it to be a focus of study in interpersonal communication | ||
- | research. How CMC changes our | ||
- | messages—how they are constructed, | ||
- | specific relational purposes or with lesser or | ||
- | greater effect—remain important questions that | ||
- | continue to drive inquiry in interpersonal CMC | ||
- | research. How does the Internet affect the likelihood | ||
- | of having relationships? | ||
- | how do we manage these relationships? | ||
- | disclosures and affectations influence others and | ||
- | ourselves, and how do online interpersonal processes | ||
- | affect the instrumental and group dynamics | ||
- | that technology enables? How do we exploit | ||
- | existing technologies for relational purposes, and | ||
- | how do we evade the potential dampening effects | ||
- | that technologies otherwise may impose on | ||
- | relational communication? | ||
- | 444——PART IV: Processes and Functions | ||
- | developers incorporate features into communication | ||
- | systems specifically designed to support and | ||
- | enhance relational functions? | ||
- | There are many methodologies employed in | ||
- | studying CMC and social interaction. Large-scale, | ||
- | sophisticated surveys enumerate what people are | ||
- | doing online and why they say they are doing | ||
- | them (e.g., Katz & Rice, 2002; the Pew Internet & | ||
- | American Life Project at http:// | ||
- | There are accounts of the metaphors that define | ||
- | the online experience for Internet date seekers | ||
- | (e.g., Heino, Ellison, & Gibbs, 2010) and interpretive | ||
- | investigators’ insights from interacting with | ||
- | groups of young people about what is going on | ||
- | and what it means online (boyd, 2007). Conference | ||
- | proceedings from design experiments report cognitive | ||
- | and affective responses to variations in the | ||
- | representation of others’ online behaviors or different | ||
- | interface characteristics with which to | ||
- | behave online (e.g., the ACM Digital Library | ||
- | at http:// | ||
- | recent and forthcoming volumes address different | ||
- | aspects of interpersonal interaction online, | ||
- | including works by Amichai-Hamburger (2005), | ||
- | Baym (2010), Joinson, McKenna, Postmes, and | ||
- | Reips (2007), Konijn, Utz, Tanis, and Barnes | ||
- | (2008), Papacharissi (2010), Whitty and Carr | ||
- | (2006), and Wright and Webb (2011), among others. | ||
- | Any of these approaches provide glimpses | ||
- | into the changing landscape of interpersonal | ||
- | communication and CMC. No one chapter can | ||
- | paint this landscape or summarize it well. Worse | ||
- | yet, such an amalgamation of facts would suffer | ||
- | from a lack of coherence, reflecting a field with | ||
- | more work being done than consensus on what | ||
- | work should be done. Moreover, to describe what | ||
- | people are doing interpersonally with CMC today | ||
- | would be to invite obsolescence very quickly, | ||
- | given the pace of change in communication and | ||
- | technology. Readers who expect such an accounting | ||
- | in this essay will be disappointed. | ||
- | Alternatively, | ||
- | are now a greater number of theoretical positions | ||
- | directly related to CMC than any single overview | ||
- | of the field has previously described. Some theories | ||
- | have matured and are due for evaluation, | ||
- | both in light of a number of empirical tests of | ||
- | their validity, and intensions and extensions of | ||
- | their explanatory power. New technological | ||
- | developments may have enlarged or diminished | ||
- | their relative scope. Newer theories have also | ||
- | arisen, some barely tested, the ultimate utility of | ||
- | which remains to be seen. This is not to suggest | ||
- | that the only theories the field needs are those | ||
- | focusing specifically on CMC. As Yzer and | ||
- | Southwell (2008) suggested, the most useful | ||
- | explanations of CMC may be those that rest | ||
- | strongly on robust theories developed in traditional | ||
- | contexts. For the present purposes, the | ||
- | chapter focuses on CMC-specific theoretical formulations. | ||
- | As Scott (2009) observed, “We can’t | ||
- | keep up with new innovations, | ||
- | and models that can” (p. 754). | ||
- | This chapter provides, first, a description and | ||
- | evaluation of 13 major and minor theories of | ||
- | CMC. Although readers may find many of these | ||
- | approaches reviewed in other sources, particular | ||
- | efforts have been made to review the theories’ | ||
- | development and status since the publication of | ||
- | the previous edition of this Handbook (see | ||
- | Walther & Parks, 2002). These theories are classified | ||
- | according to their conceptualization of the | ||
- | way users respond to the characteristics of CMC | ||
- | systems, particularly in the adaptation to cue | ||
- | systems that differ from face-to-face communication. | ||
- | These theories include the now standard | ||
- | classification of cues-filtered-out theories, which | ||
- | assert that systematic reductions in the nonverbal | ||
- | cues conveyed by different communication systems | ||
- | lead to impersonal orientations among | ||
- | users. There are differences among the foci of | ||
- | impersonal orientations, | ||
- | and others quite specific and social in nature. | ||
- | The second group of theories depicts how characteristics | ||
- | of communicators, | ||
- | with others, and contextual factors affect the | ||
- | perceived capacities of different communication | ||
- | systems. These perceptions, | ||
- | expressiveness and normative uses of these same | ||
- | technologies as if the capacities themselves had | ||
- | changed. The next set of theories reflects the | ||
- | ways in which communicators adapt to or exploit | ||
- | Chapter 14: Computer-Mediated Communication and Interpersonal Relations——445 | ||
- | the cue limitations of CMC systems to achieve or | ||
- | surpass face-to-face levels of affinity. Finally, new | ||
- | theoretical ideas are mentioned that address the | ||
- | utility of different media over the progression of | ||
- | usage sequences or relational stages or compare | ||
- | media effects of different kinds based on the relative | ||
- | effortfulness of different channels. The discussion | ||
- | includes numerous examples from | ||
- | research that help exemplify critical findings | ||
- | related to these frameworks. | ||
- | The chapter ends with a few notes of concern | ||
- | about trends in contemporary CMC research. | ||
- | These trends represent understandable developments | ||
- | given the nature of the field, yet they also | ||
- | present potential problems in the further development | ||
- | of knowledge in certain domains. These | ||
- | concerns involve the role of face-to-face comparisons | ||
- | in technology-focused research, the | ||
- | potential impact of new technologies on earlier | ||
- | CMC theories, and the implications of multimodality | ||
- | in relationships (i.e., how to learn about | ||
- | the usage of a variety of communication systems | ||
- | within any single relationship). | ||
- | Cues-Filtered-Out Theories | ||
- | As numerous reviews have reflected, Culnan and | ||
- | Markus (1987) coined the term cues-filtered-out | ||
- | to describe a group of theories sharing the premise | ||
- | that CMC has no nonverbal cues and therefore | ||
- | occludes the accomplishment of social | ||
- | functions that typically involve those cues. | ||
- | Social Presence Theory | ||
- | Social presence theory was imported from teleconferencing | ||
- | research as one of the first analytic | ||
- | frameworks applied to CMC. Short, Williams, | ||
- | and Christie’s (1976) theory argued that various | ||
- | communication media differed in their capacity | ||
- | to transmit classes of nonverbal communication | ||
- | in addition to verbal content. The fewer the | ||
- | number of cue systems a system supported, the | ||
- | less warmth and involvement users experienced | ||
- | with one another. Hiltz, Johnson, and Agle (1978) | ||
- | and Rice and Case (1983) first applied this model | ||
- | to CMC, using it to predict that CMC rendered | ||
- | less socio-emotional content than other, multimodal | ||
- | forms of communication. Numerous experiments | ||
- | supported these contentions. Nevertheless, | ||
- | a number of theoretical and methodological | ||
- | critiques by other researchers challenged the | ||
- | social presence explanation of CMC dynamics | ||
- | (e.g., Lea & Spears, 1992; Walther, 1992). These | ||
- | critiques challenged several assumptions of the | ||
- | social presence model and identified artifacts in | ||
- | the research protocols that supported its application | ||
- | to CMC. | ||
- | Despite the demise of social presence in some | ||
- | quarters of CMC research, extensive research | ||
- | and definition efforts have continued with | ||
- | respect to the role of presence with regard to settings | ||
- | such as virtual reality and computer-based | ||
- | gaming. Biocca, Harms, and Burgoon (2003) | ||
- | suggested definitional issues that a robust theory | ||
- | of social presence might require and the prospective | ||
- | benefits of a renewed social presence | ||
- | theory for comparing effects among various | ||
- | media. K. M. Lee (2004) highlighted the various | ||
- | conceptions of presence in related literatures, | ||
- | including telepresence, | ||
- | presence, as each construct describes somewhat | ||
- | different states of awareness of the self and others | ||
- | during electronic communication (see also | ||
- | Lombard & Ditton, 1997). Nevertheless, | ||
- | various constructs and related measures are | ||
- | often used interchangeably or in duplication. | ||
- | Nowak and Biocca’s (2003) experiment on the | ||
- | optimal level of anthropomorphism for avatars, | ||
- | for example, compared the research participants’ | ||
- | responses to lifelike, cartoonish, or abstract avatars | ||
- | on measures of presence, copresence, and | ||
- | social presence. Each of the presence variables | ||
- | reflected the same result: Abstract rather than | ||
- | lifelike avatars stimulated the greatest presence | ||
- | responses. | ||
- | Although researchers have in large part | ||
- | rejected the notion that CMC is inherently inferior | ||
- | to traditional communication media on outcomes | ||
- | such as social presence, there appears to be | ||
- | a resurgence of presence-related evaluations that | ||
- | 446——PART IV: Processes and Functions | ||
- | that were common in first-generation CMC (i.e., | ||
- | text-based e-mail, chat, and discussions) being | ||
- | applied to next-generation CMC, which features | ||
- | photos, graphics, avatars, or videos. Many individuals | ||
- | apparently assume that we no longer | ||
- | need to concern ourselves with earlier forms of | ||
- | minimal-cue CMC (or research about them) | ||
- | now that we have systems with greater bandwidth | ||
- | and presence. Education technologists, | ||
- | particular, have been eager to recommend avatarbased | ||
- | interactions in Second Life as a cure for | ||
- | what remains, in the view of many, an impoverished | ||
- | level of social presence in plain-text educational | ||
- | conferencing (see Baker, Wentz, & Woods, | ||
- | 2009; Barnes, 2009; Childress & Braswell, 2006; | ||
- | Gunawardena, | ||
- | avatars’ interpersonal impact beyond what may | ||
- | be expected due to novelty or to the hyperpersonal | ||
- | intercultural potential of asynchronous | ||
- | learning networks (e.g., Oren, Mioduser, & | ||
- | Nachmias, 2002). In a world where we know our | ||
- | communication partners by photo if not by face, | ||
- | plain-text CMC with no additional multimedia | ||
- | is, in some corners, being retro-conceptualized as | ||
- | never having been quite good enough, especially | ||
- | in comparison with the more presence-bearing | ||
- | media that seem (for now) to be here to stay. It | ||
- | appears that, although the formal theory of social | ||
- | presence has become disregarded in many quarters | ||
- | of CMC research, the concept of social presence | ||
- | as an inherent consequence of multiple cues | ||
- | remains alive and well (e.g., Bente, Rüggenberg, | ||
- | Krämer, & Eschenburg, 2008). | ||
- | It remains to be seen whether social presence | ||
- | or some other construct and framework will | ||
- | emerge to account for why individuals use various | ||
- | new media for various relational activities. | ||
- | Observers of the new multimodal world of relationships | ||
- | have yet to identify coherent explanations | ||
- | about the relational functions and goals to | ||
- | which older new media and newer new media | ||
- | are being strategically applied. Meanwhile, | ||
- | plain-text messaging through e-mail, mobile | ||
- | phones, and the 140-character Twitter tweet | ||
- | suggest that text-based CMC is not at all gone. | ||
- | The subject of multiple media, interpersonal | ||
- | functions, and sequences is discussed once more | ||
- | at the end of this chapter. | ||
- | Lack of Social Context Cues | ||
- | Like social presence theory, the lack of social | ||
- | context cues hypothesis (Siegel, Dubrovsky, | ||
- | Kiesler, & Mcguire, 1986; Sproull & Kiesler, 1986) | ||
- | once guided numerous studies on the interpersonal | ||
- | and group impacts of CMC, although it has | ||
- | been more or less set aside in response to contradictions | ||
- | that became apparent in native Internet | ||
- | environments (see Sproull & Faraj, 1997), as well | ||
- | as to formal theoretical and empirical challenges. | ||
- | The framework originally specified that CMC | ||
- | occluded the cues to individuality and normative | ||
- | behavior that face-to-face interaction transacts | ||
- | nonverbally. As a result, according to the model, | ||
- | CMC users became deindividuated and normless; | ||
- | CMC prevented users from attuning to others’ | ||
- | individual characteristics, | ||
- | dominance, or affection, resulting in a cognitive | ||
- | reorientation of its users. The lack of nonverbal | ||
- | cues led them to become self-focused and resistant | ||
- | to influence, disinhibited, | ||
- | affectively negative. | ||
- | As with social presence theory, a number of | ||
- | critical issues related to the research paradigms | ||
- | accompanying the lack of social context cues | ||
- | approach, and to the various theoretical issues it | ||
- | raised, have led to the model’s retreat. Negative | ||
- | social responses to CMC have been accounted for | ||
- | theoretically through more complex frameworks | ||
- | that can explain both negative affective outcomes | ||
- | as well as positive ones, in formulations | ||
- | incorporating CMC’s impersonal, interpersonal, | ||
- | and hyperpersonal effects (see Walther, 1996). | ||
- | Researchers articulated alternative assumptions | ||
- | and employed different research designs, leading | ||
- | to the development of second-generation theories | ||
- | of CMC. These latter positions predict different | ||
- | social and interpersonal effects of CMC | ||
- | media depending on other contextual factors | ||
- | (Walther, 2010). | ||
- | That said, research still surfaces that shares the | ||
- | basic premises of the lack of social context cues | ||
- | Chapter 14: Computer-Mediated Communication and Interpersonal Relations——447 | ||
- | hypothesis, and such studies, ironically, often | ||
- | include methodological strategies that were criticized | ||
- | with regard to the original research on the | ||
- | lack of social context cues and social presence | ||
- | models. One such approach has appeared in several | ||
- | experiments on compliance gaining and | ||
- | social influence in CMC (e.g., Guadagno & | ||
- | Cialdini, 2002): The absence of nonverbal cues in | ||
- | CMC is said to prevent communicators from | ||
- | detecting demographic, | ||
- | characteristics of others. The implication | ||
- | in this case is that CMC confers no peripheral | ||
- | cues to persuasion (see Petty & Cacioppo, 1986). | ||
- | As a result, it is suggested, CMC users process | ||
- | messages based on argument strength—that is, | ||
- | through central routes to persuasion alone—and | ||
- | they experience less overall attitude change than | ||
- | do off-line communicators. Methodologically, | ||
- | such research has employed very short interaction | ||
- | sessions among strangers in CMC and faceto-face | ||
- | (e.g., Di Blasio & Milani, 2008), an | ||
- | approach that has been demonstrated elsewhere | ||
- | to impose a time-by-medium interaction effect, | ||
- | artifactually dampening impression formation in | ||
- | CMC (for a review, see Walther, 1992, 1996). | ||
- | Other persuasion research following a lack | ||
- | of social context cues approach apparently | ||
- | employed short, scripted real-time chat sessions | ||
- | as the operationalization of e-mail yet made | ||
- | claims about e-mail’s persuasion-related potential | ||
- | on that platform (Guadagno & Cialdini, | ||
- | 2007). Whereas gender-by-medium differences | ||
- | in persuadability are obtained in such research, it | ||
- | is difficult to know how to generalize these findings. | ||
- | Using synchronous CMC chat to describe | ||
- | asynchronous e-mail is a questionable, | ||
- | certainly not a novel, approach. This conflation | ||
- | should be of concern, although differences due to | ||
- | synchronous versus asynchronous CMC remain | ||
- | understudied in CMC research. | ||
- | In a similar vein, Epley and Kruger (2005) | ||
- | argued that e-mail’s lack of nonverbal cues prevents | ||
- | users from deciphering others’ individual | ||
- | characteristics following the presentation of a | ||
- | false pre-interaction expectancy about a pending | ||
- | conversational partner. The authors conducted | ||
- | several experiments in which they primed interviewers | ||
- | to expect a high or low level of intelligence | ||
- | or extraversion from an interviewee. Some | ||
- | dyads communicated using a voice-based system, | ||
- | while so-called e-mail communicators used a | ||
- | real-time CMC chat system. In the voice conditions, | ||
- | although conversations were restricted to | ||
- | simple, predetermined questions and spontaneous | ||
- | answers, they constituted actual interactions | ||
- | between two real (randomly assigned) persons. | ||
- | In contrast, there was no real interaction between | ||
- | CMC interviewers and their ostensible interviewees, | ||
- | since the responses interviewers received | ||
- | to their questions were sent by a researcher who | ||
- | had transcribed what a voice-based interviewee | ||
- | had said to a different, voice-based interviewer. | ||
- | This research strategy was intended to prevent | ||
- | the introduction of random variations in CMC | ||
- | users’ language in order to provide a true test of | ||
- | the difference between CMC and speech. Epley | ||
- | and Kruger found that expectancies persisted in | ||
- | the post-CMC evaluations of partners, although | ||
- | they dissipated in voice. | ||
- | A replication of this work by Walther, | ||
- | DeAndrea, and Tong (2010) challenged the former | ||
- | study’s methods, particularly the use of | ||
- | transcribed speech as the operationalization of | ||
- | CMC interviewee responses. This concern | ||
- | focused on the lack of real interactions in the | ||
- | prior study and the employment of language that | ||
- | had been generated accompanying voice, in | ||
- | speech, as if it was structurally and functionally | ||
- | identical to the language that is generated in | ||
- | spontaneous CMC, where communicators know | ||
- | that there are no vocal cues to convey identity | ||
- | and social meanings. Walther, DeAndrea, and | ||
- | Tong argued that CMC users adapt to the | ||
- | medium by altering their language in a way that | ||
- | compensates for the absence of nonverbal cues. | ||
- | Their study therefore involved bona fide interviewees | ||
- | in both voice and CMC who could generate | ||
- | naturalistic responses to interviewers in | ||
- | both media. CMC users’ postdiscussion impressions | ||
- | were rated as more intelligent than those of | ||
- | voice-based partners, in contrast to Epley and | ||
- | Kruger’s (2005) findings and consistent with the | ||
- | 448——PART IV: Processes and Functions | ||
- | hyperpersonal model of CMC (Walther, 1996). | ||
- | Impressions changed in conjunction with the | ||
- | number of utterances exchanged, consistent with | ||
- | the social information processing theory of CMC | ||
- | (Walther, 1992). | ||
- | Indeed, the history of contradictions between | ||
- | cues-filtered-out findings and the more prosocial | ||
- | effects of CMC can be explained in part by the | ||
- | methodological constraints on CMC interaction, | ||
- | which reflect competing theoretical orientations | ||
- | about communication and CMC (Fulk & Gould, | ||
- | 2009; Walther, 2010). | ||
- | Media Richness | ||
- | Media richness theory (Daft & Lengel, 1986), | ||
- | also known as information richness theory (Daft | ||
- | & Lengel, 1984), originally modeled the relative | ||
- | efficiency of different communication media for | ||
- | reducing equivocality in organizational decision | ||
- | making. It has also been applied to interpersonal | ||
- | situations either formally or informally. The | ||
- | term rich media is often used casually in the | ||
- | literature to signify multimodal or greaterbandwidth | ||
- | media, that is, communication media | ||
- | that support multiple verbal and nonverbal cue | ||
- | systems. | ||
- | Media richness theory seems to be one of the | ||
- | most popular models of CMC (for a review, see | ||
- | D’Urso & Rains, 2008). This may be because some | ||
- | of its core constructs are so intuitively appealing, | ||
- | especially the media richness construct. This construct, | ||
- | in turn, is defined theoretically by four | ||
- | subdimensions: | ||
- | supported by a medium, (2) the immediacy of | ||
- | feedback provided by a medium (from unidirectional | ||
- | to asynchronously bidirectional to simultaneous | ||
- | bidirectional interaction), | ||
- | for natural language (compared with the more | ||
- | formal genre of memoranda, business letters, or | ||
- | data printouts), and (4) message personalization | ||
- | (i.e., the degree to which a message can be made | ||
- | to address a specific individual). So in the original | ||
- | formulation, | ||
- | richest mode because it includes multiple-cue | ||
- | systems, simultaneous sender-and-receiver | ||
- | exchanges (providing great immediacy of feedback), | ||
- | natural language, and message personalization. | ||
- | Telephones, letters, and memoranda each | ||
- | offer progressively declining levels of richness. | ||
- | The second core construct of the model is the | ||
- | equivocality of a messaging situation. Equivocality | ||
- | is defined as the degree to which a decisionmaking | ||
- | situation and information related to it are | ||
- | subject to multiple interpretations. | ||
- | The theory argues that there is a match | ||
- | between the equivocality of a message situation | ||
- | and the richness of the medium with which to | ||
- | address it: To be most efficient, greater equivocality | ||
- | requires more media richness, and lesser | ||
- | equivocality requires leaner media. Although the | ||
- | theory was originally formulated so that the result | ||
- | of optimal match (or of mismatch) affects efficiency, | ||
- | it is often described in the literature as | ||
- | being related to communication effectiveness. | ||
- | It is somewhat surprising that the theory | ||
- | remains as frequently employed as it does given | ||
- | that, even within the domain of organizational | ||
- | communication, | ||
- | support. The first empirical investigation of the | ||
- | theory (Daft, Lengel, & Trevino, 1987) addressed | ||
- | it indirectly by asking managers to indicate in a | ||
- | questionnaire what media they would use to | ||
- | address a list of various communication situations. | ||
- | These situations had been rated by other | ||
- | research participants in terms of their equivocality. | ||
- | The degree to which the test managers’ media | ||
- | selections (in terms of richness) matched the situations’ | ||
- | equivocality led to a media sensitivity score | ||
- | for each manager. Through inspection of the | ||
- | same managers’ personnel evaluations, | ||
- | found a correlation between media sensitivity | ||
- | and managerial performance. These results were | ||
- | interpreted as supporting the theory. | ||
- | One can see that the investigation described | ||
- | above does not actually test the theoretical relationships | ||
- | specified by the theory; rather, it evaluates | ||
- | peripheral processes and implications that | ||
- | may be related to the model less directly. That is, | ||
- | rather than examining direct relationships | ||
- | between the actual use of differently rich media, | ||
- | equivocal message situations, and efficiency | ||
- | Chapter 14: Computer-Mediated Communication and Interpersonal Relations——449 | ||
- | (e.g., the time and effort required), Daft et al. | ||
- | (1987) examined organizationally related implications | ||
- | of managers’ projections of media selection. | ||
- | Such findings have been contested by other | ||
- | researchers in a variety of ways. For example, | ||
- | Markus (1994) questions whether the projective, | ||
- | self-report approach to asking managers what | ||
- | media they would choose for various communication | ||
- | tasks generalizes to managers’ actual | ||
- | media use. In her own study, Markus found that | ||
- | managers express media selection preferences | ||
- | very consistent with the matches prescribed by | ||
- | Daft and Lengel (1986) when completing questionnaires. | ||
- | By shadowing several managers, however, | ||
- | Markus found that their media selection | ||
- | behavior frequently departed from their questionnaire | ||
- | responses. It appears that managers | ||
- | hold normative beliefs about media choice that | ||
- | align with the media richness model but the normal | ||
- | constraints and spontaneous-communication | ||
- | needs that they face lead them to select | ||
- | media in ways that defy media richness sensibilities, | ||
- | and according to Markus, they do not suffer | ||
- | any decrement in performance as a result. | ||
- | A second significant threat to the model came | ||
- | in the form of an experiment by Dennis and | ||
- | Kinney (1998) that sought to test directly the | ||
- | core theoretical dynamics of media richness theory | ||
- | as well as its extension toward interpersonal | ||
- | perceptions of online collaborators. This study | ||
- | involved small groups that addressed a simple or | ||
- | equivocal task, using videoconferencing (greater | ||
- | in richness) or text-based messaging (lower in | ||
- | richness). They found that media richness produced | ||
- | differences in the time it took different | ||
- | groups to complete their tasks. Media richness | ||
- | did not, however, interact with task equivocality | ||
- | to affect decision quality or interpersonal perceptions. | ||
- | More recent work examined media richness | ||
- | variations with differences in high-context | ||
- | versus low-context cultural backgrounds of users | ||
- | (Setlock, Quinones, & Fussell, 2007). Researchers | ||
- | predicted that there would be more benefit from | ||
- | using videoconferencing than from a reducedbandwidth | ||
- | medium among those from a highcontext | ||
- | culture (see Hall, 1976). Culture, however, | ||
- | did not interact with media richness differences | ||
- | on conversational efficiency, task performance, | ||
- | or satisfaction. | ||
- | Walther and Parks (2002) criticized the model | ||
- | as being unable to generate hypotheses that apply | ||
- | to many forms of CMC. Their concern focused | ||
- | on the four subdimensions of richness. When | ||
- | applying these criteria to traditional media, it is | ||
- | easy to see that all four dimensions tend to vary in | ||
- | conjunction with one another as one compares | ||
- | media. As one moves away from face-to-face to | ||
- | memoranda, for example, there are fewer code | ||
- | systems, less immediacy of feedback, less natural | ||
- | language, and little message personalization. | ||
- | However, e-mail does not fit into this scheme so | ||
- | neatly. Although e-mail is generally text based and | ||
- | therefore low in multiple codes, it may be | ||
- | exchanged relatively rapidly (if all addressees are | ||
- | online at the same time), it may use natural language | ||
- | (or formal language), and its capacity for | ||
- | message personalization is great. Likewise, one | ||
- | may use Facebook to broadcast information | ||
- | about oneself to a large audience, but Facebook | ||
- | also features public displays of relatively private | ||
- | one-to-one messages between friends that are | ||
- | sometimes very personally, even idiosyncratically, | ||
- | encoded. As these examples should make clear, | ||
- | media richness theory offers no clear method for | ||
- | ascribing a unitary richness value when the | ||
- | underlying criteria that constitute richness may | ||
- | reflect very different values, and researchers cannot | ||
- | apply the model to media that offer so much | ||
- | variation among richness characteristics. This | ||
- | issue may be an underlying factor that has contributed | ||
- | to the troubling level of empirical support | ||
- | for the model in CMC research. | ||
- | Notwithstanding the troubling level of empirical | ||
- | support, media richness theory continues to | ||
- | be applied to new media and new interpersonal | ||
- | settings (without much success). For instance, | ||
- | Cummings, Lee, and Kraut (2006) used media | ||
- | richness theory to predict that friends from high | ||
- | school use telephone and face-to-face contact | ||
- | more frequently than CMC to maintain their | ||
- | friendships when they transition to college. Their | ||
- | results showed, however, that CMC was the most | ||
- | 450——PART IV: Processes and Functions | ||
- | frequently used medium among such friends. | ||
- | Rather than abandon the media richness framework, | ||
- | the authors conjectured that the relatively | ||
- | greater expense of making long-distance phone | ||
- | calls interfered with their predictions. | ||
- | In a different vein, Hancock, Thom-Santelli, | ||
- | and Ritchie (2004) used media richness theory | ||
- | in a study comparing individuals’ media preferences | ||
- | for deceiving another person. They argued | ||
- | that lying can be considered an equivocal message, | ||
- | and therefore, individuals should select | ||
- | rich media such as face-to-face or telephone for | ||
- | deception more often than they would choose | ||
- | text-based chat or e-mail. Results of a diary | ||
- | study did not support the hypothesis. Telephone | ||
- | was the most frequently used medium for | ||
- | deception, followed by face-to-face and instant | ||
- | messaging (which did not differ from each | ||
- | other), and e-mail was the least frequently used | ||
- | medium for deception. Hancock et al. (2004) | ||
- | concluded with a features-based explanation of | ||
- | their findings: Individuals resist the use of | ||
- | media that are recordable (such as CMC) so | ||
- | that their lies cannot be caught later or provide | ||
- | evidence with which to hold them to account. | ||
- | The recordability characteristic of new media, | ||
- | they argued, questions the applicability of | ||
- | media richness’s assumption that communication | ||
- | channels differ along a single dimension. | ||
- | Interestingly, | ||
- | an abundance of deception in date-finding websites | ||
- | has yet to be reconciled with this study’s | ||
- | conclusion that liars avoid recordable and | ||
- | accountable media. | ||
- | The Social Identity Model of | ||
- | Deindividuation Effects | ||
- | The social identity model of deindividuation | ||
- | effects, or SIDE model, has had an interesting evolution | ||
- | in the literature. Although its developers | ||
- | have argued that it is decidedly not about interpersonal | ||
- | communication, | ||
- | mechanisms that generate its predictions (e.g., | ||
- | Postmes & Baym, 2005), it has been applied to | ||
- | many settings that appear to be interpersonal in | ||
- | nature. At one point, SIDE was one of the most | ||
- | dominant theories of CMC. Changes to the theory | ||
- | in response to empirical challenges and changes in | ||
- | communication technology—attributes that bear | ||
- | on the theory’s central assumptions—appear to | ||
- | have accompanied a marginal decline in its popularity | ||
- | and scope. In certain contexts, however, it | ||
- | remains a most parsimonious and robust explanatory | ||
- | framework for CMC dynamics. | ||
- | The SIDE model is included here as a cuesfiltered-out | ||
- | theory because it, like others, considers | ||
- | the absence of nonverbal cues in CMC as | ||
- | an impersonalizing deterrent to the expression | ||
- | and detection of individuality and the development | ||
- | of interpersonal relations online. The | ||
- | SIDE model differs from other cues-filtered-out | ||
- | approaches, however, in that rather than leave | ||
- | users with no basis for impressions or relations | ||
- | at all, it predicts that CMC shifts users toward a | ||
- | different form of social relations based on social | ||
- | self-categorization. The SIDE model (Lea & | ||
- | Spears, 1992; Reicher, Spears, & Postmes, 1995) | ||
- | specifies two factors that drive online behavior. | ||
- | The first factor is the visual anonymity that | ||
- | occurs when CMC users send messages to one | ||
- | another through text (in real-time chat or in | ||
- | asynchronous conferencing and e-mail). When | ||
- | communicators cannot see each other, the model | ||
- | puts forth, communicators do not attune themselves | ||
- | to one another on the basis of their interindividual | ||
- | differences. Drawing on principles of | ||
- | social identification and self-categorization theories | ||
- | (Tajfel, 1978; Tajfel & Turner, 1979), the | ||
- | model originally argued that visual anonymity | ||
- | led to deindividuation, | ||
- | with regard to one’s own (and others’) individuality. | ||
- | When in such a state of deindividuation, | ||
- | the second major factor in the theory comes into | ||
- | play: whether CMC users orient themselves to | ||
- | some salient social category or group (i.e., a | ||
- | social identification). If a CMC user experiences | ||
- | a social identification, | ||
- | other CMC users on the basis of in-group (or | ||
- | out-group) dynamics. These classifications then | ||
- | drive users’ perceptions of similarity and attraction | ||
- | toward online partners in gross terms, that | ||
- | Chapter 14: Computer-Mediated Communication and Interpersonal Relations——451 | ||
- | is, as a unified perception based on of whether | ||
- | others online seem to belong to the same group | ||
- | that is salient to the user, rather than as a sum or | ||
- | average of one’s perceptions of each other partner | ||
- | in a conversation. | ||
- | The model also specified, theoretically, | ||
- | when a deindividuated CMC user orients to an | ||
- | individualistic identification rather than a social | ||
- | identification, | ||
- | and attraction should not occur. The model | ||
- | views interpersonal (rather than group) attraction | ||
- | toward other members as an aggregation of | ||
- | randomly distributed values based on a person’s | ||
- | attraction to each idiosyncratic individual. That | ||
- | is, when perceiving others individually, | ||
- | like one person a lot, dislike another person a lot, | ||
- | and like others to different degrees, which, on | ||
- | balance, should average to some neutral level. | ||
- | Attraction to a group to which one belongs, in | ||
- | contrast, should be systematically positive. This | ||
- | difference in the form of attraction marks a key | ||
- | distinction between a group-based and an interpersonally | ||
- | based approach to the social dynamics | ||
- | of CMC (Lea, Spears, & de Groot, 2001; for a | ||
- | review, see Walther & Carr, 2010). | ||
- | The most basic research strategy that provided | ||
- | evidence for SIDE involved experiments manipulating | ||
- | the two factors, visual anonymity and type | ||
- | of identification. In a prototypical experiment, | ||
- | one half of the small groups of CMC users in | ||
- | an experiment would communicate with one | ||
- | another using a text-based chat system only, | ||
- | whereas the other half would use the chat system | ||
- | and be shown photos that were supposed to represent | ||
- | the members. The former condition provides | ||
- | visual anonymity, presumably instigating | ||
- | deindividuation, | ||
- | involves visual identification and individuation. | ||
- | The second factor, group identification, | ||
- | by prompting participants explicitly to | ||
- | look for the unique and distinctive characteristics | ||
- | of the group in which they were involved rather | ||
- | than to try to detect what made the individuals | ||
- | with whom they were conversing unique and | ||
- | different from one another. Such research has | ||
- | produced predicted interaction effects of visual | ||
- | anonymity/ | ||
- | identity, with conditions involving both visual anonymity | ||
- | and group identity providing the greatest | ||
- | scores on attraction (e.g., Lea & Spears, 1992). | ||
- | The SIDE model’s advocates originally argued | ||
- | that the nature of group memberships with | ||
- | which CMC users identified comprised fairly | ||
- | general social categories (e.g., English vs. Dutch | ||
- | nationalities, | ||
- | men vs. women, etc.). Although attempts to | ||
- | arouse these kinds of identifications have been | ||
- | employed in SIDE experiments, | ||
- | produced effects as clearly as when identification | ||
- | was targeted only with the local group, that is, the | ||
- | unique and specific small group involved in the | ||
- | interaction. These results have led to revisions of | ||
- | the SIDE model, and recent versions focus on | ||
- | visually anonymous CMC leading to in-group | ||
- | identification with the group of participants | ||
- | rather than via larger social categories. | ||
- | Although the SIDE model is distinctively not | ||
- | about an interpersonal basis for online relations, | ||
- | it has been argued to offer an explanatory framework | ||
- | for what others consider to be interpersonal | ||
- | phenomena. Lea and Spears (1995) argued | ||
- | that SIDE can explain the development of | ||
- | romantic relationships online. Rejecting notions | ||
- | that intimate attraction is necessarily and exclusively | ||
- | premised on physical appearance or the | ||
- | exchange of nonverbal cues (a rejection with | ||
- | which several other CMC theories in this chapter, | ||
- | described below, concur), they argued that intimacy | ||
- | may result from the perceptions of similarity | ||
- | that arise from a couple’s shared membership | ||
- | in a variety of social categories (see also Sanders, | ||
- | 1997). From this perceptive, although partners | ||
- | who communicate romantically online may | ||
- | believe that they love each other interpersonally, | ||
- | this would be an illusion. Their projection of | ||
- | interpersonal intimacy would be an outgrowth | ||
- | and projection of the similarity/ | ||
- | share on the basis of their social (rather than | ||
- | interpersonal) identifications. Other essays have | ||
- | made quite strident pronouncements about the | ||
- | superiority of a groups-based, | ||
- | interpersonally-based, | ||
- | 452——PART IV: Processes and Functions | ||
- | a variety of online social responses. They have | ||
- | gone so far as to suggest that interpersonally | ||
- | based explanations for systematic social effects in | ||
- | online behavior are empirically conflicting and | ||
- | conceptually misleading and that they have | ||
- | impeded theoretical understanding about CMC | ||
- | effects (Postmes & Baym, 2005). | ||
- | Despite these pronouncements about its overarching | ||
- | superiority as an organizing model for | ||
- | the entire field, the SIDE model seems now to be | ||
- | taking a more appropriately limited place in | ||
- | CMC research. This change appears to be due to | ||
- | uncertainties about the components of the model | ||
- | itself, empirical “competitions” in which social | ||
- | and interpersonal components both appear, and | ||
- | new media forms that alternately extend or | ||
- | restrict the scope of SIDE’s domain. | ||
- | The deindividuation aspect of the model itself | ||
- | has been redefined (see E.-J. Lee, 2004). Although | ||
- | visual anonymity is still a key predictor of SIDE’s | ||
- | effects, empirical studies have led to questions | ||
- | about the deindividuation that anonymity was | ||
- | said to produce, in terms of its actual potency | ||
- | and its theoretical necessity in the model. | ||
- | Research has found that in some cases SIDE-like | ||
- | responses to an anonymous online crowd are | ||
- | greater when a CMC user is more, rather than | ||
- | less, self-aware (Douglas & McGarty, 2001). This | ||
- | and other studies have led SIDE theorists to | ||
- | argue that it is not deindividuation but rather | ||
- | depersonalization—the inability to tell who is | ||
- | who online—that is (and always has been) the | ||
- | construct on which SIDE phenomena depend. It | ||
- | is admirable that the theory is open to such | ||
- | modification, | ||
- | departure from the important elements of social | ||
- | identity theory on which it originally drew and | ||
- | from assertions that were argued strongly in earlier | ||
- | articulations of the model. | ||
- | Responding in part to SIDE advocates’ claims | ||
- | that their model could explain seemingly interpersonal | ||
- | effects, researchers made efforts to | ||
- | demonstrate more carefully whether group or | ||
- | interpersonal factors were operating in their | ||
- | CMC studies. Greater attention has been paid to | ||
- | whether the operationalizations and measurements | ||
- | involved in research can discern group-based | ||
- | constructs from interpersonally based constructs | ||
- | (Wang, 2007). Moreover, experiments have directly | ||
- | compared SIDE-based versus interpersonallybased | ||
- | factors in the same study for their effects | ||
- | on the responses of CMC groups. Rogers and | ||
- | Lea (2004), for example, studied a number of | ||
- | virtual groups composed of students in England | ||
- | and the Netherlands who worked over an | ||
- | extended period of time via asynchronous conferencing | ||
- | and real-time chat. Steps were employed | ||
- | to maximize the salience of each virtual group’s | ||
- | unique identity (i.e., researchers addressed groups | ||
- | by their collective name only, rather than individually | ||
- | by member). Repeated measures indicated | ||
- | that group attraction did not maintain | ||
- | evenly or increase over time. To the contrary, | ||
- | interpersonal affiliation among members reflected | ||
- | marginal increases over the duration of the | ||
- | groups’ experience. More recently, Wang, Walther, | ||
- | and Hancock’s (2009) experiment with visually | ||
- | anonymous online groups involved a SIDE-based | ||
- | assignment of four members to two distinct subgroups. | ||
- | The researchers further prompted one | ||
- | member of each four-person group to enact | ||
- | interpersonally friendly (or unfriendly) behaviors | ||
- | toward the rest of the members. In general, other | ||
- | members evaluated the deviants in each group on | ||
- | the basis of the individuals’ interpersonal behaviors | ||
- | and not on the basis of those individuals’ ingroup | ||
- | or out-group status with respect to other | ||
- | subgroup members. These results suggest that | ||
- | SIDE is less robust than previously suggested | ||
- | when CMC users confront bona fide behavioral | ||
- | differences among members while remaining | ||
- | visually anonymous. A recent essay offers a more | ||
- | tempered view of when SIDE and other intergroup | ||
- | dynamics are likely to arise in CMC and | ||
- | when they give way to interpersonal dynamics | ||
- | (Walther & Carr, 2010). | ||
- | Recent revisions to the SIDE model have also | ||
- | retracted its previous assertions that visually | ||
- | anonymous CMC users cannot, theoretically, | ||
- | relate to one another as individuals (Postmes, | ||
- | Baray, Haslam, Morton, & Swaab, 2006; Postmes, | ||
- | Spears, Lee, & Novak, 2005). Now individuals are | ||
- | Chapter 14: Computer-Mediated Communication and Interpersonal Relations——453 | ||
- | seen, over time and under conditions of visual | ||
- | anonymity, to form relationships with each other | ||
- | first and then to identify with and form attachments | ||
- | to the small, interacting group. Group | ||
- | identification arises inductively in this new perspective. | ||
- | These formulations represent a major | ||
- | departure from SIDE’s previous assumptions. | ||
- | They also leave unaddressed the mechanisms by | ||
- | which interacting individuals online become sufficiently | ||
- | attracted to one another to provide the | ||
- | interpersonal motivation, attraction, and reward | ||
- | that may be required to facilitate the durations of | ||
- | interaction required for individuals to develop an | ||
- | emergent group identity. | ||
- | New media forms also raise interesting issues | ||
- | with regard to SIDE’s scope. Many new technologies | ||
- | seem quite amenable to SIDE analysis of | ||
- | their effects on users, while others seem distinctly | ||
- | out of its reach. Communication systems such as | ||
- | social network sites, which confront CMC users | ||
- | with photos of prospective interactants, | ||
- | the control group conditions in the prototypical | ||
- | SIDE experiment, that is, the visually identified | ||
- | conditions for which SIDE predicts no systematic | ||
- | effects. Alternatively, | ||
- | systems are very compatible with | ||
- | SIDE dynamics (see Walther, 2009): CMC systems | ||
- | display anonymous comments with no | ||
- | visual identification of other commenters, no | ||
- | interaction with other commenters, and the relatively | ||
- | clear implication that participants belong | ||
- | to the same social group. A recent study drew on | ||
- | SIDE theory successfully to predict readers’ | ||
- | responses to the comments apparently left by | ||
- | other YouTube viewers in reaction to antimarijuana | ||
- | public service announcements. Researchers | ||
- | appended experimentally created comment sets | ||
- | (featuring all-positive or all-negative comments) | ||
- | to institutionally produced antimarijuana videos | ||
- | on YouTube pages. The more the participants | ||
- | identified with the ostensible commenters, the | ||
- | more the valence of those comments affected viewers’ | ||
- | attitudes about the public service announcement | ||
- | videos and about marijuana (Walther, | ||
- | DeAndrea, Kim, & Anthony, 2010). The propagation | ||
- | of visually and authorially anonymous | ||
- | reviews or talk-back sites on the Web merits further | ||
- | analysis from a SIDE perspective. | ||
- | Signaling Theory | ||
- | Donath (1999) was the first to suggest a theoretical | ||
- | basis underlying the skepticism CMC | ||
- | users often hold about the legitimacy of others’ | ||
- | online self-presentation and how CMC facilitates | ||
- | such deception. Prior to Donath’s position, | ||
- | references abounded (and are still heard) regarding | ||
- | the anonymity of the Internet facilitating | ||
- | deception, although anonymity is a complex | ||
- | concept with various potential meanings pertaining | ||
- | to online interaction (see Rains & Scott, | ||
- | 2007). Anonymity’s lack of utility in the case of | ||
- | deception is captured in the fact that individuals | ||
- | may lie about themselves (online or off) using | ||
- | their real names or pseudonyms. A better explanation | ||
- | for why people mistrust others’ self-presentations | ||
- | is needed, and Donath’s (1999) | ||
- | approach provides a reasonable one to explain | ||
- | why people trust many forms of information | ||
- | that are communicated off-line but tend to mistrust | ||
- | the kind of information individuals provide | ||
- | about themselves that is most prevalent in | ||
- | CMC discussions. | ||
- | According to Donath, the fields of economics | ||
- | and biology have contributed to the development | ||
- | of signaling theory, which Donath then applied to | ||
- | the evaluation of self-presentational claims in | ||
- | text-based discussion fora. Signaling theory, | ||
- | Donath reviews (2007), shows “why certain signals | ||
- | are reliable and others are not. For a signal to | ||
- | be reliable, the costs of deceptively producing | ||
- | the signal must outweigh the benefits.” Within | ||
- | signaling theory there are two types of signals. | ||
- | Assessment signals are artifacts that have an inherent | ||
- | and natural relationship with some characteristic | ||
- | with which they are associated. An animal | ||
- | that has very large horns, for example, must be | ||
- | strong; strength is required to support large, | ||
- | heavy horns. It would be impossible to support | ||
- | very heavy horns without being strong, that is, to | ||
- | deceive about one’s strength using such horns; | ||
- | one could not falsely bear heavy horns if one did | ||
- | 454——PART IV: Processes and Functions | ||
- | not actually possess the strength to do so. | ||
- | Conventional signals, on the other hand, bear | ||
- | socially determined symbolic relationships with | ||
- | their referents. Verbal claims about the possession | ||
- | of some attribute such as strength may be conventionally | ||
- | understood in terms of the intention of | ||
- | the claim, but ultimately, conventional signals | ||
- | are not as trustworthy as assessment signals. | ||
- | Conventional signals cost little to manufacture or | ||
- | construct, and they are therefore less trustworthy. | ||
- | Text-based online discussions, | ||
- | proposed, are dominated by conventional signals | ||
- | since such discussions are composed only of verbal | ||
- | statements. Because self-descriptive claims | ||
- | can easily be faked through verbal discourse, she | ||
- | argues, there is (rightfully) considerable wariness | ||
- | about whether online discussants can be trusted | ||
- | entirely to be who they say they are. | ||
- | Rare in the animal world, conventional | ||
- | signals are very common in human communication. | ||
- | The self-descriptions in online | ||
- | profiles are mostly conventional signals—it | ||
- | is just as easy to type 24 or 62 as it is to | ||
- | enter one’s actual age, or to put M rather | ||
- | than F as one’s gender. (Donath, 2007) | ||
- | In the context of text-based CMC, Donath’s | ||
- | (1999, 2007) application of signaling theory | ||
- | appears to have limited predictive utility and to | ||
- | raise certain validity questions. The perspective | ||
- | suggests no limiting factor to the general proposition | ||
- | that users should be suspicious of verbal | ||
- | claims and self-descriptions in CMC. Although | ||
- | the framework helps us understand online skepticism, | ||
- | it does not provide much in terms of | ||
- | variations in observers’ assessments of others’ | ||
- | online veracity, although questions of credibility | ||
- | in CMC have received ample attention from several | ||
- | other perspectives (e.g., Metzger, Flanagin, | ||
- | Eyal, Lemus, & McCann, 2003; Sundar, 2008). | ||
- | Second, the perspective does not consider whether | ||
- | there are indeed characteristics that are | ||
- | transmitted sufficiently reliably through text and | ||
- | language alone. It is hard to imagine, for instance, | ||
- | that an individual could convey being articulate | ||
- | or being humorous online unless the individual | ||
- | actually possessed those characteristics. In such | ||
- | cases, verbal behavior should constitute assessment | ||
- | signals rather than conventional signals. | ||
- | These and other qualities that language might | ||
- | reliably convey are not considered in the application | ||
- | of signaling theory to CMC. | ||
- | To her credit, Donath (2007) has expanded the | ||
- | application of signaling to explain the benefits | ||
- | and potentials of social network sites in helping | ||
- | observers assess the veracity of others’ online | ||
- | claims. Like Walther and Parks’ (2002) warranting | ||
- | theory (described below), she contends that the | ||
- | ability to contact other individuals in a target’s | ||
- | social network reduces the likelihood that the | ||
- | target will engage in deception. From a signaling | ||
- | theory perspective, | ||
- | a target’s deception may result in social sanctions | ||
- | or punishment for the target. These negative | ||
- | repercussions are seen as costly in the parlance of | ||
- | economic theory, and knowing that these costs | ||
- | could accrue provides a disincentive for social | ||
- | network site users to prevaricate in their profiles. | ||
- | Thus, social network sites, unlike text-based discussion | ||
- | systems that are divorced from an individual’s | ||
- | off-line social network, should reduce | ||
- | deception and increase the trust that CMC users | ||
- | place in others. These suggestions are yet to be | ||
- | tested, although the findings reported by Toma, | ||
- | Hancock, and Ellison (2008) and Warkentin, | ||
- | Woodworth, Hancock, and Cormier (2010) are | ||
- | consistent with this notion. DeAndrea and | ||
- | Walther (in press) found, however, that individuals | ||
- | are quite well aware of their friends’ distorted | ||
- | self-presentations on Facebook profiles. | ||
- | Experiential and Perceptual | ||
- | Theories of CMC | ||
- | Electronic Propinquity Theory | ||
- | The theory of electronic propinquity (Korzenny, | ||
- | 1978) received brief mention in the previous | ||
- | edition of the Handbook’s chapter on CMC | ||
- | (Walther & Parks, 2002). Those comments noted | ||
- | Chapter 14: Computer-Mediated Communication and Interpersonal Relations——455 | ||
- | that relatively little attention had been paid to the | ||
- | theory since its first appearance in 1978 and its | ||
- | original follow-up in 1981 (Korzenny & Bauer, | ||
- | 1981; cf. Monge, 1980). Possibly because the | ||
- | most advanced technology mentioned in its | ||
- | introduction was interactive closed-circuit television, | ||
- | the theory has almost escaped the attention | ||
- | of the CMC research literature. Its formal structure | ||
- | and the nature of its constructs, however, | ||
- | leave it quite amenable to forms of CMC that can | ||
- | be characterized in terms of their bandwidth and | ||
- | interactivity. The theory has received a modicum | ||
- | of renewed attention since 2002, including | ||
- | empirical research that may contribute to a | ||
- | renewal of interest in its potential. | ||
- | The central construct in electronic propinquity | ||
- | theory is the psychological closeness experienced | ||
- | by communicators. Whereas physical | ||
- | closeness or proximity is generally associated | ||
- | with interpersonal involvement in face-to-face | ||
- | communication, | ||
- | communicators connected through electronic | ||
- | media could also experience a sense of closeness, | ||
- | or electronic propinquity. | ||
- | The theory specified the main and interaction | ||
- | effects on electronic propinquity from a number | ||
- | of specific factors. The first factor is bandwidth, | ||
- | or the capacity of a channel to convey multiplecue | ||
- | systems (like the first factor in media richness, | ||
- | described above, which followed propinquity | ||
- | theory historically); | ||
- | the more the propinquity. Mutual directionality | ||
- | (like immediacy of feedback) increases propinquity, | ||
- | as do users’ greater communication skills, | ||
- | the lower (rather than higher) level of complexity | ||
- | of a task, fewer communication rules, and fewer | ||
- | choices among alternative media. These factors | ||
- | also interact with each other, as specified in a | ||
- | series of derived theorems: The greater the bandwidth, | ||
- | the less the effect of task difficulty; the | ||
- | greater users’ skills, the less the effect of more | ||
- | communication rules; and the fewer the choices | ||
- | among media, the less the effect of bandwidth. | ||
- | Although the theory predated the Internet, | ||
- | these theoretical properties provide a sufficiently | ||
- | open-ended definitional framework in which | ||
- | specific media may be considered even though | ||
- | they did not exist when the theory was created. | ||
- | Therefore CMC, with or without auditory and/or | ||
- | visual cues, can fit neatly into electronic propinquity’s | ||
- | calculus. Owing in part to a failed test using | ||
- | traditional media in an experiment by Korzenny | ||
- | and Bauer (1981), until recently, no such application | ||
- | to CMC had been examined empirically. | ||
- | A recent replication of electronic propinquity | ||
- | theory’s original test has indicated greater validity | ||
- | for the theory and has successfully applied it to | ||
- | CMC. Walther and Bazarova (2008) identified a | ||
- | confound in Korzenny and Bauer’s (1981) original | ||
- | experiment that they attempted to isolate in a | ||
- | new empirical study. The confound had to do | ||
- | with the theory’s proposition that the fewer the | ||
- | number of media choices one has, the greater the | ||
- | propinquity one experiences with the remaining | ||
- | medium, a dynamic that may have been present | ||
- | in Korzenny and Bauer’s study but was unplanned | ||
- | and unchecked. Walther and Bazarova investigated | ||
- | this factor directly. They created experimental | ||
- | groups that alternatively had two media | ||
- | among their members (e.g., audioconferencing | ||
- | among all members but additional videoconferencing | ||
- | among a subset of members) or had | ||
- | only one medium connecting everyone. Media | ||
- | included face-to-face discussion, videoconferencing, | ||
- | audio conferencing, | ||
- | Results supported the proposition about the | ||
- | effect of media choice and bandwidth. Those | ||
- | who had no choices (i.e., only one medium) | ||
- | experienced greater propinquity using that | ||
- | medium than did those who used the same | ||
- | medium among two media present, when it was | ||
- | the lower bandwidth medium of the two. For | ||
- | example, text-based chat produced greater propinquity | ||
- | and satisfaction ratings when chat was | ||
- | the only channel a group was able to use, compared | ||
- | with ratings of chat in groups where a | ||
- | member used both chat and audio conferencing. | ||
- | These patterns persisted along all the media | ||
- | combinations evaluated in the study: “There | ||
- | were no differences between ratings obtained as a | ||
- | result of chat, voice, video, or FtF communication | ||
- | among groups who used only one medium” | ||
- | 456——PART IV: Processes and Functions | ||
- | (Walther & Bazarova, 2008, p. 640), although the | ||
- | use of two media consistently led to less propinquity | ||
- | for the lower bandwidth medium. The | ||
- | experiment offered further support for the theory. | ||
- | It demonstrated complex interactions among | ||
- | choice, bandwidth, communicator skill, and task | ||
- | difficulty, which generally supported electronic | ||
- | propinquity’s predictions. | ||
- | In addition to the renewed potential for the | ||
- | application of propinquity theory to emerging | ||
- | media, Walther and Bazarova (2008) suggested that | ||
- | these results may help account for discrepancies in | ||
- | the existing literature on the social effects of CMC. | ||
- | Numerous studies that have examined natural | ||
- | CMC uses in field settings often indicate that it is | ||
- | less preferred by users for relationships and group | ||
- | maintenance than other, higher bandwidth media | ||
- | and face-to-face interactions. In contrast, numerous | ||
- | experimental studies show relatively high levels | ||
- | of satisfaction and positive relational communication | ||
- | using CMC alone under various circumstances. | ||
- | Electronic propinquity theory’s unique | ||
- | focus on the effects of media choice helps resolve | ||
- | this discrepancy. It alerts us to the notion that when | ||
- | communicators are aware or have a history of alternative | ||
- | media options for a specific relationship, | ||
- | CMC should be expected to be the least satisfying. | ||
- | Where communicators are constrained to one | ||
- | channel alone, as experiments often require, electronic | ||
- | propinquity theory explains how users quite | ||
- | readily apply communication skills to make the | ||
- | remaining available medium effective and satisfying. | ||
- | Whether there are many real-world settings | ||
- | where users are constrained in this way to a single | ||
- | medium is a different question, but electronic propinquity | ||
- | theory helps unlock what had been an | ||
- | unexplained paradox in the research literature with | ||
- | regard to these conflicting empirical findings. | ||
- | Social Influence Theory | ||
- | The social influence approach to media richness | ||
- | (Fulk, Schmitz, & Steinfield, 1990; Fulk, Steinfield, | ||
- | Schmitz, & Power, 1987), like channel expansion | ||
- | theory (described below; Carlson & Zmud, | ||
- | 1999), focuses on the factors that change users’ | ||
- | perceptions about the capacities of CMC and | ||
- | their consequent uses of the medium. It may be | ||
- | important to note that this approach shifts the | ||
- | definition of media richness to a perceptually | ||
- | based phenomenon describing how expressively a | ||
- | medium may be used. This departs from media | ||
- | richness theory’s approach, which defines media | ||
- | richness based on the a priori properties of media. | ||
- | Social influence theory rejects those aspects of | ||
- | media richness (and social presence) theory that | ||
- | argue that certain properties of media exclusively | ||
- | determine their expressive capabilities and their | ||
- | utility in interpersonal (and other) domains. | ||
- | Instead, Fulk et al. (1987) argue, the nature of | ||
- | media and their potentials are socially constructed, | ||
- | and the richness and utility of a medium are | ||
- | affected by interaction with other individuals in | ||
- | one’s social network. Following from this networkanalytic | ||
- | perspective, | ||
- | strong ties have more influence on one’s perception | ||
- | of CMC richness than do one’s weak ties. In organizational | ||
- | settings, these distinctions include one’s | ||
- | close coworkers versus workers in other organizational | ||
- | units. The authors of the model suggest that | ||
- | social interaction with network ties may include | ||
- | overt discussions about communication media and | ||
- | their uses. It may also include communications | ||
- | with one’s ties via a given CMC medium, and the | ||
- | qualities of those exchanges also shape perceptions | ||
- | about that medium’s potential and normative uses. | ||
- | Social influence has received robust support in | ||
- | previous empirical studies. Research testing the | ||
- | model shows stronger correspondence between | ||
- | individuals’ perceptions of e-mail’s richness and | ||
- | those of their strongly tied coworkers than those of | ||
- | weakly tied coworkers. Research has established the | ||
- | cognitive and perceptual basis of these effects: | ||
- | One’s attitudes about e-mail’s utility correspond | ||
- | primarily with one’s perceptions about one’s | ||
- | coworkers’ perceptions and secondarily with | ||
- | those coworkers’ actual attitudes. These differences | ||
- | between direct perceptions and metaperceptions | ||
- | help demonstrate that the social influence | ||
- | process is not a magic bullet but a communication | ||
- | process that leads to individuals’ reconstructions of | ||
- | others’ messages (Fulk, Schmitz, & Ryu, 1995). | ||
- | Chapter 14: Computer-Mediated Communication and Interpersonal Relations——457 | ||
- | The social influence model has not received | ||
- | very much research attention recently. Its developers | ||
- | have shifted their focus after having set a | ||
- | precedent for complex research strategies exploring | ||
- | social influence that would not be simple to | ||
- | replicate. Nevertheless, | ||
- | about the potential and preferred uses | ||
- | of newer communication technologies may be a | ||
- | topic of renewed attention. Social network websites, | ||
- | for example, make most visible one’s strong | ||
- | and weak ties. They make evident what the normative | ||
- | expressive and usage practices of one’s | ||
- | friends are. These phenomena correspond quite | ||
- | clearly to the theoretical factors implicated in | ||
- | social influence theory, and future research on | ||
- | how different groups of users evolve different | ||
- | standards and norms for messaging via these | ||
- | systems can benefit from a social influence | ||
- | approach. | ||
- | Channel Expansion Theory | ||
- | Channel expansion theory (Carlson & Zmud, | ||
- | 1994, 1999) also takes issue with the fixed properties | ||
- | ascribed to various media in media richness | ||
- | theory. Whereas social influence theory | ||
- | focuses on how dynamic interaction in a social | ||
- | network of communicators predicts and explains | ||
- | how users come to perceive CMC’s richness, the | ||
- | primary focus of channel expansion theory is on | ||
- | internal, experiential factors. The theory’s original, | ||
- | central argument is that as individuals gain | ||
- | more experience with a particular communication | ||
- | medium, the medium becomes richer for | ||
- | them (Carlson & Zmud, 1994). That is, theoretically, | ||
- | it becomes more capable for the conduct of | ||
- | equivocal and interpersonally oriented communication | ||
- | tasks. With experience, the authors | ||
- | argued, users learn how to encode and decode | ||
- | affective messages using a particular channel. | ||
- | The channel expansion theory was expanded | ||
- | to include increasing familiarity with an interaction | ||
- | partner as a second major factor affecting | ||
- | the richness or expressiveness of a medium that | ||
- | is used to communicate with that partner, with | ||
- | experience related to the conversational topic | ||
- | and organizational experience as additional, | ||
- | potential factors (Carlson & Zmud, 1999). Social | ||
- | influence by other communicators was posited to | ||
- | affect richness perceptions as well. The model | ||
- | was tested by its developers in a cross-sectional | ||
- | survey and in a longitudinal panel study, in both | ||
- | cases focusing only on e-mail. The first study | ||
- | produced a moderate correlation between experience | ||
- | using e-mail and e-mail richness perceptions | ||
- | (see also Foulger, 1990) as well as a | ||
- | correlation between familiarity with the conversational | ||
- | partner and e-mail richness (Carlson & | ||
- | Zmud, 1999). The panel study likewise found an | ||
- | increase in perceived e-mail richness commensurate | ||
- | with e-mail experience over time. Social | ||
- | influence was not significant. | ||
- | The theory lay dormant until D’Urso and | ||
- | Rains (2008) replicated and expanded investigation | ||
- | of the model. These researchers included | ||
- | traditional media (face-to-face and telephone) | ||
- | as well as text-based chat, along with e-mail, in a | ||
- | survey of organizational users. Results were | ||
- | fairly consistent with Carlson and Zmud’s (1999) | ||
- | findings with respect to new media. For chat and | ||
- | e-mail, experience with the media, and no other | ||
- | variables, affected media richness ratings. For | ||
- | traditional media, only social influence and | ||
- | experience with one’s conversation partner, and | ||
- | not experience with the medium, affected richness | ||
- | perceptions. | ||
- | Channel expansion theory offers an antidote | ||
- | to the inconsistencies of media richness research | ||
- | in a sense. The learning-based explanation that | ||
- | channel expansion theory offers is reasonable | ||
- | and intuitive. At the same time, other approaches | ||
- | deal with several of the theory’s elements in more | ||
- | sophisticated (as well as in more complicated) | ||
- | ways. For instance, CMC users’ ability to encode | ||
- | and decode personal and social cues is central to | ||
- | the social information processing theory of CMC | ||
- | (see below); the influence of others’ richness perceptions | ||
- | is demonstrated more particularly in | ||
- | social influence theory; and electronic propinquity | ||
- | theory offers a different account for why | ||
- | the same medium may offer more psychological | ||
- | closeness and satisfaction in some circumstances | ||
- | 458——PART IV: Processes and Functions | ||
- | and less in others by specifying a constellation of | ||
- | situational, | ||
- | Theories of Interpersonal | ||
- | Adaptation and Exploitation | ||
- | of Media | ||
- | Social Information Processing | ||
- | The social information processing (SIP) theory | ||
- | of CMC (Walther, 1992) has become a widely | ||
- | used framework for explaining and predicting | ||
- | differences between text-based CMC and off-line | ||
- | communication, | ||
- | efforts to expand its scope to include newer, multimedia | ||
- | forms of online communication. The | ||
- | theory seeks to explain how, with time, CMC | ||
- | users are able to accrue impressions of and relations | ||
- | with others online, and these relations | ||
- | achieve the level of development that is expected | ||
- | through off-line communication. | ||
- | The theory articulates several assumptions | ||
- | and propositions concerning what propels these | ||
- | effects. It explicitly recognizes that CMC is devoid | ||
- | of the nonverbal communication cues that | ||
- | accompany face-to-face communication. It differs, | ||
- | however, from theories of CMC that argue | ||
- | that the lack of nonverbal cues impedes impressions | ||
- | and relations or reorients users’ attention to | ||
- | impersonal states or to group-based forms of | ||
- | relating. The SIP theory articulates the assumption | ||
- | that communicators are motivated to | ||
- | develop interpersonal impressions and affinity | ||
- | regardless of medium. It further proposes that | ||
- | when nonverbal cues are unavailable, | ||
- | adapt their interpersonal (as well as instrumental) | ||
- | communication to whatever cues remain | ||
- | available through the channel that they are using. | ||
- | Thus, in text-based CMC, the theory expects | ||
- | individuals to adapt the encoding and decoding | ||
- | of social information (i.e., socioemotional or | ||
- | relational messages) into language and the timing | ||
- | of messages. Although many readers of the | ||
- | theory have interpreted this argument to refer to | ||
- | emoticons (typed-out smiles, frowns, and other | ||
- | faces; e.g., Derks, Bos, & von Grumbkow, 2007), | ||
- | the theory implicates language content and style | ||
- | characteristics as more primary conduits of | ||
- | interpersonal information. | ||
- | A second major contention of SIP is that CMC | ||
- | operates at a rate different from face-to-face communication | ||
- | in terms of users’ ability to achieve | ||
- | levels of impression and relational definition | ||
- | equivalent to face-to-face interaction. Because | ||
- | verbal communication with no nonverbal cues | ||
- | conveys a fraction of the information of multimodal | ||
- | communication, | ||
- | should require a longer time to take place. | ||
- | CMC users need time to compensate for the | ||
- | slower rate in order to accumulate sufficient information | ||
- | with which to construct cognitive models | ||
- | of partners and to emit and receive messages with | ||
- | which to negotiate relational status and definition. | ||
- | With respect to the first major theoretical | ||
- | contention, recent research has demonstrated | ||
- | that communicators adapt social meanings into | ||
- | CMC language that they would otherwise express | ||
- | nonverbally. Walther, Loh, and Granka (2005) | ||
- | had dyads discuss a controversial issue: face-toface | ||
- | or via real-time computer chat. In each dyad, | ||
- | prior to their dyadic discussion, the researchers | ||
- | privately prompted one of the members to | ||
- | increase or decrease his or her friendliness toward | ||
- | the other individual by whatever means that person | ||
- | chose to do so. The naive partner rated the ad | ||
- | hoc confederate after the interaction was over, | ||
- | providing ratings of the confederate’s immediacy | ||
- | and affection dimensions of relational communication. | ||
- | Coders then analyzed recordings of the | ||
- | face-to-face confederates for the kinesic, vocalic, | ||
- | and verbal behaviors that corresponded to variations | ||
- | in immediacy and affection ratings. A number | ||
- | of vocalic cues provided the greatest influence | ||
- | on relational communication, | ||
- | group of specific kinesic behaviors; the confederates’ | ||
- | verbal behaviors had no significant influence | ||
- | on perceptions of their immediacy and | ||
- | affection. In contrast, in the CMC transcripts, | ||
- | several specific verbal behaviors bore significant | ||
- | association with differences in relational communication. | ||
- | No less variance was accounted for | ||
- | Chapter 14: Computer-Mediated Communication and Interpersonal Relations——459 | ||
- | by the verbal cues in CMC than the nonverbal | ||
- | cues accounted for in face-to-face interaction. | ||
- | This research provides confirmation about the | ||
- | hypothetical process mechanisms of the SIP theory, | ||
- | beyond confirmation of a relationship | ||
- | between distal antecedents and consequents. | ||
- | The theory is somewhat equivocal about the | ||
- | second major element, the temporal dimension. | ||
- | The primary theoretical explanation for the | ||
- | additional time CMC requires for impression | ||
- | development and relational management is that | ||
- | electronic streams of verbal communication | ||
- | without nonverbal accompaniments contain less | ||
- | information than multimodal face-to-face | ||
- | exchanges. Even in so-called real-time CMC, chat | ||
- | communication cues are not fully duplexed in | ||
- | terms of seeing a partner’s reactions at the same | ||
- | time that they generate an utterance. From this | ||
- | perspective, | ||
- | exchange of real-time CMC should provide a | ||
- | relatively smaller accumulation of interpersonal | ||
- | information than would face-to-face communication | ||
- | over the same time interval. However, | ||
- | discussions of the theory also reflect that more | ||
- | time may be needed for relational effects to | ||
- | accrue in CMC because CMC is generally used | ||
- | in a more sporadic manner than face-to-face | ||
- | communication. Online communication often | ||
- | involves asynchronous media, that is, systems | ||
- | that allow one communicator to create a message | ||
- | at one time and recipients to obtain it later at a | ||
- | point in time they choose. The SIP perspective | ||
- | can account for both approaches to temporal | ||
- | distortion theoretically, | ||
- | have been used in empirical research: Recent | ||
- | studies have added support for SIP by using | ||
- | strictly asynchronous communication (Peter, | ||
- | Valkenburg, & Schouten, 2005; Ramirez, Zhang, | ||
- | McGrew, & Lin, 2007) or real-time chat episodes | ||
- | repeated over several consecutive days (Hian, | ||
- | Chuan, Trevor, & Detenber, 2004; Wilson, Straus, | ||
- | & McEvily, 2006). However, greater theoretical | ||
- | precision would enhance understanding of the | ||
- | theory’s scope and application. | ||
- | The SIP theory has been expanded by researchers | ||
- | other than its original developer to incorporate | ||
- | media other than text-based CMC, although | ||
- | these formulations are tentative. Tanis and | ||
- | Postmes (2003) established that the presentation | ||
- | of partners’ photos or the exchange of preinteraction | ||
- | biographies of CMC users works | ||
- | equivalently well in instilling interpersonal expectations | ||
- | in CMC settings. Previously, SIP research | ||
- | had been more oriented to verbal exchanges, such | ||
- | as CMC users’ biographical disclosures, | ||
- | statements, and style. Therefore, it is noteworthy | ||
- | that photographic information appears to | ||
- | function similarly as biographical text. | ||
- | Westerman, Van Der Heide, Klein, and Walther | ||
- | (2008) offered a more sophisticated approach to | ||
- | the potential effects of photos and other multimedia | ||
- | information online within SIP framework. | ||
- | These researchers reconsidered SIP’s root proposition | ||
- | that lesser bandwidth media transmit less | ||
- | information per exchange than do greater bandwidth | ||
- | media, affecting the rate of impression | ||
- | formation and relational development. They | ||
- | examined various forms and channels of personal | ||
- | information from this perspective. As a result, | ||
- | they argued that some mediated forms of information | ||
- | are faster (i.e., they transmit more social | ||
- | information in a respective time interval, e.g., | ||
- | photos or videos) and others are slower. This | ||
- | simple assertion is consistent with SIP; yet an | ||
- | expanded view of faster and slower media allows | ||
- | for greater scope and a wider range of predictions | ||
- | about new, multimodal media than the theory | ||
- | was originally conceived to explain. | ||
- | Despite these potential adjustments with | ||
- | which to integrate visual information in the SIP | ||
- | framework, recent studies have demonstrated | ||
- | considerably limited additional effects on attraction | ||
- | and uncertainty reduction when additional | ||
- | modalities accompany text-based CMC. In one | ||
- | study, Antheunis, Valkenburg, and Peter (2007) | ||
- | compared face-to-face dyadic communication | ||
- | with an instant messaging system, and a hybrid | ||
- | instant messenger that displayed visual information | ||
- | about a dyadic partner alongside textual CMC. | ||
- | After a get-to-know-you session, no significant | ||
- | differences in interpersonal attraction arose | ||
- | between these conditions. Visual cues actually | ||
- | 460——PART IV: Processes and Functions | ||
- | increased the frequency of disclosures and personal | ||
- | questions, in contrast to previous findings | ||
- | that disclosure and personal questions were proportionately | ||
- | more frequent in CMC than in faceto-face | ||
- | interactions (Tidwell & Walther, 2002). | ||
- | Finally, a recent examination of uncertainty | ||
- | reduction processes via social network sites | ||
- | focused explicitly on the potential obsolescence | ||
- | of SIP theory in light of new media characteristics | ||
- | providing information aside from the interactive | ||
- | exchanges on which SIP traditionally | ||
- | focuses. Another study by Antheunis, Valkenburg, | ||
- | and Peter (2010) argued that social network sites | ||
- | provide an abundance of asynchronous and | ||
- | unintrusive biographical, | ||
- | and sociometric information about other | ||
- | people. Therefore, they predicted that these | ||
- | alternative forms of social information should | ||
- | be expected to be the primary sources of uncertainty | ||
- | reduction about others, without need of | ||
- | recourse to interactive communication via text. | ||
- | Results of the study showed that despite the | ||
- | appeal of these newer forms of information display, | ||
- | interactive communication contributed the | ||
- | most to uncertainty reduction about another | ||
- | individual. | ||
- | Hyperpersonal CMC | ||
- | The hyperpersonal model of CMC (Walther, 1996) | ||
- | proposes a set of concurrent theoretically based | ||
- | processes to explain how CMC may facilitate | ||
- | impressions and relationships online that exceed | ||
- | the desirability and intimacy that occur in parallel | ||
- | off-line interactions. The model follows four common | ||
- | components of the communication process | ||
- | to address how CMC may affect cognitive and | ||
- | communication processes relating to message | ||
- | construction and reception: (1) effects due to | ||
- | receiver processes, (2) effects among message senders, | ||
- | (3) attributes of the channel, and (4) feedback | ||
- | effects. The model has received a great deal of | ||
- | attention in the literature. At the same time, extensions | ||
- | and revisions to the model have been proposed | ||
- | on the basis of both conceptual and empirical contributions. | ||
- | Certain aspects of the model remain | ||
- | underresearched—such as the holistic integrity of | ||
- | its subcomponents as well as the reciprocal effects | ||
- | of feedback—although some progress has been | ||
- | made with respect to these issues. | ||
- | Receivers. When receiving messages from others | ||
- | in CMC, an individual may tend to exaggerate | ||
- | perceptions of the message sender. In the absence | ||
- | of the physical and other cues that face-to-face | ||
- | encounters provide, rather than fail to form an | ||
- | impression, receivers fill in the blanks with regard | ||
- | to missing information. This often takes the form | ||
- | of idealization if the initial clues about another | ||
- | person are favorable. The original articulation of | ||
- | the model drew explicitly on SIDE theory (Lea & | ||
- | Spears, 1992) in formulating receiver dynamics. | ||
- | The SIDE model also describes how CMC users | ||
- | make overattributions of similarity when communicating | ||
- | under conditions of visual anonymity | ||
- | if contextual cues suggest that a conversational | ||
- | partner shares some salient social identity with | ||
- | the receiver. It further proposes that communicators | ||
- | experience heightened attraction in these | ||
- | circumstances. The SIDE model argues that the | ||
- | specific form of attraction is focused on one’s | ||
- | attachment to the group identity rather than to | ||
- | the individual person. | ||
- | Recent rearticulations of the hyperpersonal | ||
- | model, however, have attempted to broaden the | ||
- | concepts related to receiver dynamics (see Walther, | ||
- | 2006). The hyperpersonal approach now suggests | ||
- | that an initial impression may be activated not | ||
- | only by group identifications but through individual | ||
- | stereotypes, | ||
- | or due to the vague resemblance of an | ||
- | online partner to a previously known individual | ||
- | (see Jacobson, 1999). Analysis of online impressions | ||
- | using social relations analysis (Kenny, 1994), | ||
- | which assesses how uniform or differentiated | ||
- | one’s impressions of other group members are, | ||
- | offers a promising approach to the question of | ||
- | group- or interpersonally based impressions in | ||
- | CMC (see Markey & Wells, 2002). | ||
- | Senders. Text-based CMC facilitates selective selfpresentation. | ||
- | Online, one may transmit only cues | ||
- | Chapter 14: Computer-Mediated Communication and Interpersonal Relations——461 | ||
- | that an individual desires others to have. It need | ||
- | not be apparent to others what one’s physical | ||
- | characteristics are (unless one discloses them | ||
- | verbally), nor do individuals generally transmit | ||
- | unconscious undesirable interaction behaviors | ||
- | such as interruptions, | ||
- | or nonverbal disfluencies of the kind that detract | ||
- | from desired impressions face-to-face. Instead, | ||
- | CMC senders may construct messages that portray | ||
- | themselves in preferential ways, emphasizing | ||
- | desirable characteristics and communicating in a | ||
- | manner that invites preferential reactions. Selfdisclosure | ||
- | quite naturally plays a role in this | ||
- | process, by which individuals not only disclose | ||
- | what content they wish to be known but also, | ||
- | through disclosure, breed intimacy. Research has | ||
- | found that disclosure and personal questions | ||
- | constitute greater proportions of utterances in | ||
- | online discussions among strangers than they do | ||
- | in comparable face-to-face discussion (Joinson, | ||
- | 2001; Tidwell & Walther, 2002). This may be a | ||
- | simple adaptation to the lack of nonverbal | ||
- | expressive behavior, which would normally provide | ||
- | uncertainty-reducing information. Yet CMC | ||
- | users’ disclosures are more intimate than those of | ||
- | face-to-face counterparts, | ||
- | aspect to this difference as well. | ||
- | Apart from explicit disclosures, | ||
- | senders selectively self-present is conveyed | ||
- | through the content of the exchanges in terms of | ||
- | how communicators express their evaluations of | ||
- | various subjects, their agreement with partners, | ||
- | word choice, and any number of ordinary expressions | ||
- | of affinity. A recent study (Walther, Van Der | ||
- | Heide, Tong, Carr, & Atkin, 2010) asked one | ||
- | member of an online dyad, who was about to | ||
- | discuss the topic of hamburgers with an online | ||
- | partner, to behave online in a way that prompted | ||
- | the other person to like or to dislike the individual. | ||
- | The significant differences in liking for the | ||
- | actor following the CMC conversation were associated | ||
- | with the actor’s level of agreements versus | ||
- | disagreements and concurrence versus divergence | ||
- | in statements about the other partner’s | ||
- | favorite hamburger. Online (and perhaps elsewhere), | ||
- | we manipulate our desirability to others | ||
- | not so much by overt statements of interpersonal | ||
- | affect but through the way we complement or | ||
- | contest others’ views of things in the world. In other | ||
- | research, systematic differences among individuals’ | ||
- | construction of stories about themselves | ||
- | online led to changes in their self-perceptions. | ||
- | Gonzales and Hancock (2008) asked participants | ||
- | to write about their experiences in a manner that | ||
- | would lead others to perceive them as either | ||
- | extraverted or introverted. Half of the participants | ||
- | in the experiment posted these responses | ||
- | in a blog, presumably accessible to other CMC | ||
- | users, whereas the other half of the participants | ||
- | recorded their answers in a private document for | ||
- | ostensible analysis at a later time, anonymously. | ||
- | The blog writers generated significantly different | ||
- | self-perceived extraversion/ | ||
- | following the experience, in accordance with the | ||
- | characteristic they had been assigned. Gonzales | ||
- | and Hancock concluded that selective selfpresentation | ||
- | online provides a potent influence | ||
- | not only on others but also on the transformation | ||
- | of an individual’s self, a phenomenon they | ||
- | called “identity shift.” | ||
- | Channel. The third dimension of the hyperpersonal | ||
- | model involves characteristics of the channel | ||
- | and how CMC as a medium contributes to | ||
- | the deliberate construction of favorable online | ||
- | messages. One part of the channel factor focuses | ||
- | on the mechanics of the CMC interface, suggesting | ||
- | that users exploit the ability to take time to | ||
- | contemplate and construct messages mindfully. | ||
- | In many CMC applications (especially asynchronous | ||
- | systems), users may take some time to | ||
- | create optimally desirable messages without | ||
- | interfering with conversational flow, very much | ||
- | unlike the effects of face-to-face response latencies. | ||
- | The hyperpersonal model further suggests | ||
- | that CMC users capitalize on the ability to edit, | ||
- | delete, and rewrite messages to make them reflect | ||
- | intended effects before sending them. The introduction | ||
- | of the model further suggested that | ||
- | CMC users may redirect cognitive resources into | ||
- | enhancing one’s messages, without the need to | ||
- | pay attention to the physical behaviors of one’s | ||
- | 462——PART IV: Processes and Functions | ||
- | conversational partner or oneself, or to the ambient | ||
- | elements where one is physically located | ||
- | when communicating (in contrast to these | ||
- | demands on attention in face-to-face conversations). | ||
- | CMC users can focus their attention on | ||
- | message construction to a greater extent than | ||
- | they would in face-to-face conversations. | ||
- | Recent research supported a number of these | ||
- | suggestions (Walther, 2007). A study led college | ||
- | student participants to believe that they were | ||
- | joining an asynchronous discussion with a prestigious | ||
- | professor, who was described in much | ||
- | detail; with a relatively undesirable high school | ||
- | student in another state, also described in detail; | ||
- | or with another college student, about whom no | ||
- | details were provided except for the student’s | ||
- | name. Participants’ message composition was | ||
- | recorded in real time and later coded and rated, | ||
- | and a different group of participants provided | ||
- | ratings of how desirable each type of target | ||
- | would be as an interaction partner. Results of the | ||
- | study revealed that the more desirable the partner | ||
- | was, the more editing (deletions, backspaces, | ||
- | and insertions) the participants exercised in | ||
- | composing their messages to that partner. The | ||
- | degree of editing corresponded to the degree of | ||
- | relational affection ascribed to the messages by | ||
- | raters. Participants self-reported their level of | ||
- | mindfulness during message production, which | ||
- | had been expected to differ based on the attractiveness | ||
- | of the ostensible message target. It did | ||
- | not, and neither did the time they spent composing | ||
- | their messages differ as a result of the different | ||
- | types of targets. However, those who were | ||
- | more mindful spent more of their time editing | ||
- | the messages they had written, whereas those | ||
- | who were lower in mindfulness spent more time | ||
- | choosing what to write. These results add a level | ||
- | of verification to the model’s contention that | ||
- | CMC users exploit the unique mechanical features | ||
- | of the medium to enhance relational qualities | ||
- | of their messages. | ||
- | Another facet of the channel component of | ||
- | the hyperpersonal model has been more difficult | ||
- | to interpret, and research results have challenged the | ||
- | model’s original assertions about asynchronous | ||
- | versus synchronous CMC. The model originally | ||
- | posited that asynchronous CMC allowed users to | ||
- | avoid the problems of entrainment associated | ||
- | with face-to-face meetings. Entrainment, | ||
- | small group communication literature (Kelly & | ||
- | McGrath, 1985), refers to the ability to synchronize | ||
- | attention and interaction with collaborators. | ||
- | It is proposed to be difficult to accomplish when | ||
- | participants have competing demands on their | ||
- | time and attention. Time pressures work against | ||
- | entrainment in face-to-face meetings, leading | ||
- | communicators to neglect group maintenance | ||
- | behaviors in favor of impersonal, task-related | ||
- | discussions. Since CMC users working asynchronously | ||
- | can interact with others at times that are | ||
- | convenient and available to them, the model suggested | ||
- | that CMC should not suffer from a lack of | ||
- | maintenance behavior. CMC users would be | ||
- | more likely to engage in off-task, interpersonal | ||
- | discussions than in face-to-face meetings since, | ||
- | without meeting in real time, there is no time | ||
- | pressure constraining such exchanges. | ||
- | This aspect of the model was challenged very | ||
- | quickly. Roberts, Smith, and Pollock’s (1996) ethnographic | ||
- | observations and interviews reflected | ||
- | that individuals who enter real-time, multiplayer | ||
- | online games and chat systems (as opposed to | ||
- | asynchronous discussions) very rapidly exhibit | ||
- | sociable exchanges. Likewise, Peña and Hancock | ||
- | (2006) demonstrated that the conversations in | ||
- | a real-time multiparty sword-fighting game | ||
- | reflected more socio-emotional utterances than | ||
- | game-related statements even during online | ||
- | duels. The sociability benefits originally ascribed | ||
- | to asynchronous CMC in the introduction of the | ||
- | model are fairly clearly an aspect of many synchronous | ||
- | systems as well, at least those in which | ||
- | socializing is a goal that users bring to the system. | ||
- | A recent review of communication that takes | ||
- | place in certain online, real-time, role-playing | ||
- | games describes a great proportion and a wide | ||
- | variety of interpersonal communication behaviors | ||
- | among associates and fellow “clan” members | ||
- | (Klimmt & Hartmann, 2008). Although these | ||
- | findings suggest greater scope for the development | ||
- | of hyperpersonal dynamics, the entrainment | ||
- | Chapter 14: Computer-Mediated Communication and Interpersonal Relations——463 | ||
- | explanation has not been tested since the model | ||
- | was developed, and the conceptual and empirical | ||
- | status of this aspect of the channel component of | ||
- | the model is unclear. | ||
- | Feedback. The hyperpersonal model of CMC | ||
- | suggested that the enhancements provided by | ||
- | idealization, | ||
- | channel effects reciprocally influenced matters, | ||
- | forming a feedback system by which the CMC | ||
- | intensified and magnified the dynamics that each | ||
- | component of the model contributes. That is, | ||
- | when a receiver gets a selectively self-presented | ||
- | message and idealizes its source, that individual | ||
- | may respond in a way that reciprocates and reinforces | ||
- | the partially modified personae, reproducing, | ||
- | enhancing, and potentially exaggerating | ||
- | them. The manner in which the dynamics of | ||
- | these reciprocated expectations may modify participants’ | ||
- | character was suggested to reflect the | ||
- | process of behavioral confirmation. | ||
- | Behavioral confirmation (Snyder, Tanke, & | ||
- | Berscheid, 1977) describes how one interaction | ||
- | partner’s impression about a target partner leads | ||
- | the first partner to behave and how that behavior | ||
- | alters the responses of the target partner in | ||
- | return. The original behavioral confirmation | ||
- | study involved male participants who were | ||
- | shown photos priming them to believe that their | ||
- | upcoming female telephone interaction partners | ||
- | were physically attractive or unattractive (even | ||
- | though the actual partners were not really those | ||
- | depicted in the photos but were randomly | ||
- | selected female participants). Not only did this | ||
- | expectation affect the males’ involvement, | ||
- | affected the females’ personality-related responses | ||
- | as well, as revealed in outside raters’ evaluations | ||
- | of the females’ personalities based on audio | ||
- | recordings of their conversations. The hyperpersonal | ||
- | model appropriated this construct, suggesting | ||
- | that one’s idealized impressions of an | ||
- | online partner may lead a CMC user to reciprocate | ||
- | based on that impression, transmitting messages | ||
- | that, in turn, may shape the partner’s | ||
- | responses, shifting the target’s personality in | ||
- | the direction of the communicators’ mutually | ||
- | constructed and enacted impression. In this way, | ||
- | feedback may intensify the hyperpersonal effects | ||
- | of idealization, | ||
- | channel exploitation. | ||
- | The feedback component of the hyperpersonal | ||
- | model has received little formal research attention | ||
- | until recently. One study (Walther, Liang, et al., | ||
- | 2011) examined whether feedback to a CMC | ||
- | communicator enhanced the identity shift phenomenon | ||
- | described by Gonzales and Hancock | ||
- | (2008; see above). As Gonzales and Hancock had | ||
- | done, this experiment called on half the participants | ||
- | to answer several questions as if they were | ||
- | extraverted and the other half, as if introverted. | ||
- | Participants posted their responses to a blog or | ||
- | pasted them into a Web-based form. Departing | ||
- | from Gonzales and Hancock, in each condition, | ||
- | participants either did or did not receive feedback | ||
- | confirming their (extraverted or introverted) personality | ||
- | performances. When participants subsequently | ||
- | completed self-report measures of their | ||
- | extraversion/ | ||
- | feedback expressed more extreme scores in the | ||
- | direction of the initial prompting. This study | ||
- | also helps establish a link between two components | ||
- | of the hyperpersonal model—selective selfpresentation | ||
- | and feedback—showing that the | ||
- | activation of these components jointly produces | ||
- | stronger effects than in isolation. | ||
- | Several CMC studies have generated findings | ||
- | consistent with a behavioral disconfirmation | ||
- | effect (see Ickes, Patterson, Rajecki, & Tanford, | ||
- | 1982; Burgoon & Le Poire, 1993). Behavioral | ||
- | disconfirmation takes place when one individual | ||
- | anticipates an unpleasant interaction with a target | ||
- | person and, to avert the unpleasantness, | ||
- | in order to improve the person’s | ||
- | demeanor. One was the Walther (2007) study | ||
- | described above, in which participants anticipated | ||
- | online communication with a high school– | ||
- | age loner, a college student, or a professor. | ||
- | Despite pretest indications that the high schoolers | ||
- | were the least desired communication partners, | ||
- | male participants who believed that they | ||
- | were communicating with a male high schooler | ||
- | expressed greater editing and affection than with | ||
- | 464——PART IV: Processes and Functions | ||
- | a male peer or professor. No voice-based or faceto-face | ||
- | comparisons were done in that study. | ||
- | As discussed earlier, two recent studies | ||
- | explored the effects of preinteraction expectancies | ||
- | on subsequent impressions following CMC | ||
- | or voice-based communication (Epley & Kruger, | ||
- | 2005; Walther, DeAndrea, & Tong, 2010). | ||
- | Manipulations in both studies instilled preinteraction | ||
- | expectancies among interviewers regarding | ||
- | their partners’ high or low intelligence. | ||
- | Manipulations in both studies involved the bogus | ||
- | presentation of one of two sets of a partner’s | ||
- | ostensible photograph, grade point average, | ||
- | major, and self-reported greatest high school | ||
- | achievement. In Epley and Kruger’s (2005) | ||
- | research, half the interviewers used a phonelike | ||
- | system to speak to a real interviewee, | ||
- | interviewers used CMC to obtain responses that | ||
- | were transcribed from a person other than the | ||
- | actual interviewee. The results superficially | ||
- | appear to reflect greater behavioral confirmation | ||
- | in CMC than on the phone: Interviewers’ posttest | ||
- | assessments of interviewees’ intelligence were | ||
- | different in CMC but not in voice conditions. | ||
- | The methodology in that study, however, was | ||
- | such that the CMC interviewer could not actually | ||
- | have influenced his or her partner’s behavior. | ||
- | Walther, DeAndrea, and Tong’s (2010) replication | ||
- | involved actual interviewees in both voice | ||
- | and CMC conditions. The post-CMC ratings | ||
- | indicated relatively greater intelligence assessments | ||
- | than did those following the voice-based | ||
- | interviews, reflecting behavioral disconfirmation | ||
- | in CMC relative to voice. Further research is | ||
- | exploring the reasons for these voice versus CMC | ||
- | differences in confirmation and disconfirmation. | ||
- | Extensions. In addition to research that has added, | ||
- | supported, or challenged the hyperpersonal model’s | ||
- | claims, a variety of extensions to the model | ||
- | have been made, and it has been applied to new | ||
- | social technologies as well. | ||
- | Research exploring the dynamics of online | ||
- | date-finding systems has applied aspects of the | ||
- | hyperpersonal model in several ways. Many of | ||
- | these systems require users to create profiles that | ||
- | feature photos and self-descriptions. Ellison, | ||
- | Heino, and Gibbs’s (2006) interviews with online | ||
- | daters revealed that users make overattributions | ||
- | from minimal cues that prospective dates exhibit. | ||
- | These include gross inferences based on spelling | ||
- | errors and projections about individuals’ character | ||
- | on the basis of what time of day or night he or she | ||
- | initiates a date request. Gibbs, Ellison, and Heino | ||
- | (2006) also drew on selective self-presentation | ||
- | principles in their documentation of the dilemmas | ||
- | faced by daters when honest self-presentations | ||
- | produce fewer dates than do self-aggrandizing or | ||
- | deceptive self-presentations (see also Whitty, 2008). | ||
- | Research on deceptive self-presentation in | ||
- | online dating profiles has made particular use of | ||
- | the hyperpersonal model. Innovatively acquired | ||
- | data demonstrate that most online daters misrepresent | ||
- | their age, weight, and/or height online | ||
- | (Toma et al., 2008; see also Hall, Park, Song, & | ||
- | Cody, 2010). In several cases, these findings have | ||
- | been attributed to CMC’s facility for selective | ||
- | self-presentation and editing under asynchronous | ||
- | communication conditions (Toma et al., | ||
- | 2008). This hyperpersonal perspective has most | ||
- | recently been applied to the manner in which | ||
- | dating system users select or retouch the photographs | ||
- | they post to their electronic profiles | ||
- | (Hancock & Toma, 2009). | ||
- | Additional work has added new explanatory | ||
- | extensions to the model. Jiang, Bazarova, and | ||
- | Hancock (2011) developed a framework for | ||
- | understanding the exceptional impact of selfdisclosure | ||
- | on intimacy in CMC compared with | ||
- | face-to-face communication. Although individuals | ||
- | disclose proportionately more, and more | ||
- | intimately, in CMC than in face-to-face communication | ||
- | (Tidwell & Walther, 2002), questions | ||
- | remained over whether receivers (over) interpret | ||
- | disclosures in a way that increases intimacy in | ||
- | CMC more intensively than in off-line interactions. | ||
- | Jiang et al. (2011) hypothesized that the | ||
- | degree to which receiving disclosure from a conversational | ||
- | partner affects intimacy is shaped by | ||
- | the attributions a receiver makes for the partner’s | ||
- | motivation to disclose. A 2 × 2 experiment included | ||
- | CMC chat versus face-to-face interactions between | ||
- | Chapter 14: Computer-Mediated Communication and Interpersonal Relations——465 | ||
- | a naive participant and a confederate who offered | ||
- | several personal disclosures in one condition and | ||
- | no disclosures in a control condition. Posttest | ||
- | measures revealed that the CMC participants | ||
- | receiving disclosures experienced greater intimacy | ||
- | than did face-to-face participants. Among | ||
- | those who were exposed to a greater degree of | ||
- | disclosure, the CMC participants more frequently | ||
- | perceived that the discloser’s behavior | ||
- | was motivated by some aspect of their relationship | ||
- | rather than by the medium or the discloser’s | ||
- | disposition, | ||
- | The type of attribution fully mediated | ||
- | the relationship between the disclosure-bymedium | ||
- | interaction and intimacy. In addition to | ||
- | documenting a hyperpersonal effect of disclosure | ||
- | on intimacy, this study provided a new attributional | ||
- | mechanism to explain the effect, which is | ||
- | also affected by the medium. | ||
- | A self-attribution dynamic may also be operating | ||
- | online that leads to exaggerated intimacy as | ||
- | a result of online self-disclosure, | ||
- | that has not appeared in the literature previously. | ||
- | Although it is commonly understood that when | ||
- | another person discloses to us, we experience | ||
- | intimacy with that person, Collins and Miller’s | ||
- | (1994) meta-analysis of the relationship between | ||
- | disclosure and liking demonstrates an alternative | ||
- | connection as well: When we disclose to another | ||
- | person, our own disclosure increases our feelings | ||
- | of intimacy toward the recipient. Thus, when | ||
- | users naturally adapt to the absence of nonverbal | ||
- | cues in CMC by disclosing proportionately more | ||
- | than they do in face-to-face interaction (Joinson, | ||
- | 2001; Tidwell & Walther, 2002), it may be due to | ||
- | their own expression of relatively greater disclosure | ||
- | (in addition to or instead of the reception of | ||
- | others’ disclosures) that they attribute greater | ||
- | intimacy to disclosive CMC conversations. | ||
- | Although this contention warrants empirical | ||
- | verification, | ||
- | to the hyperpersonal cycle. | ||
- | Another form of self-perception affecting | ||
- | intimacy can be hypothesized on the basis of | ||
- | findings that it takes several times longer to have | ||
- | a conversation online than exchanging the same | ||
- | amount of verbal content in a face-to-face meeting | ||
- | (see Tidwell & Walther, 2002). If CMC chatters | ||
- | have an online conversation that feels as | ||
- | though it should only have taken an hour but | ||
- | turns out to have taken four hours, and if the | ||
- | communication rate differential is not apparent | ||
- | to CMC interactants (as it is apparently unapparent | ||
- | to online game players; Rau, Peng, & Yang, | ||
- | 2006), this temporal distortion may also lead to | ||
- | exaggerated inferences about the desirability of | ||
- | the online partner. When time seems to pass | ||
- | more quickly than it actually does, people attribute | ||
- | enjoyment to the events that occurred during | ||
- | that time (Sackett, Nelson, Meyvis, Converse, | ||
- | & Sackett, 2009). | ||
- | Other researchers have also examined the role | ||
- | of disclosures in the development of relatively | ||
- | more intimate relations online and their effects. | ||
- | Valkenburg and Peter (2009) identify three relationships | ||
- | among four specific processes that | ||
- | explain how CMC may be related to improvements | ||
- | in adolescents’ well-being. For reasons that | ||
- | have appeared in the literature (see above; for a | ||
- | review Kim & Dindia, 2011; see also Schouten, | ||
- | Valkenburg, & Peter, 2007), the first important | ||
- | relationship in the model is the effect of CMC in | ||
- | promoting online self-disclosure. Drawing on | ||
- | extensive literature, Valkenburg and Peter (2009) | ||
- | proceed to connect self-disclosure with the development | ||
- | of higher quality relationships among | ||
- | people. Finally, the authors point out the connection | ||
- | between high-quality relationships and | ||
- | development of psychological well-being. The | ||
- | first two linkages in particular implicate CMC as | ||
- | a catalyst in the relationally-based development | ||
- | of adolescent adjustment. | ||
- | In contrast to Valkenburg and Peter’s depiction | ||
- | of the beneficial effects of CMC to wellbeing, | ||
- | another application of the hyperpersonal | ||
- | model is seen in Caplan’s (2003) approach to the | ||
- | study of problematic Internet use. Caplan focuses | ||
- | on the usage and consequences of CMC by individuals | ||
- | who have social skill deficits in their | ||
- | face-to-face communication abilities and who | ||
- | experience disruptive communication-related | ||
- | anxieties. To such people, Caplan has shown that | ||
- | 466——PART IV: Processes and Functions | ||
- | Internet interaction is especially appealing, particularly | ||
- | real-time discussion systems. Because | ||
- | CMC provides individuals greater control over | ||
- | their messages and their self-presentation, | ||
- | reduces anxiety (see also Amichai-Hamburger, | ||
- | 2007). Under these conditions, individuals may | ||
- | develop what Caplan (2005) refers to as a preference | ||
- | for online social interaction, | ||
- | by beliefs that one is safer, more efficacious, | ||
- | more confident, and more comfortable with | ||
- | online interpersonal interactions and relationships | ||
- | than with traditional (face-to-face) social | ||
- | activities” (p. 723). This use of CMC is paradoxical | ||
- | and problematic, | ||
- | research, because such individuals experience a | ||
- | decline in their off-line social skills in conjunction | ||
- | with their more socially rewarding online | ||
- | interactions. | ||
- | Warranting | ||
- | A new theoretical construct, known as the warranting | ||
- | construct, was introduced in the previous | ||
- | edition of the Handbook of Interpersonal Communication | ||
- | (Walther & Parks, 2002). Warranting | ||
- | pertains to the perceived legitimacy and validity | ||
- | of information about another person that one | ||
- | may receive or observe online. Individuals often | ||
- | come to learn quite a lot about each other | ||
- | through discussions in topical online discussion | ||
- | groups or through online role-playing games | ||
- | (see Parks & Floyd, 1996; Parks & Roberts, 1998), | ||
- | as well as from personal homepages and other | ||
- | forms of online interaction and self-presentation, | ||
- | including online dating sites (see Ellison et al., | ||
- | 2006). However, as Donath (1999) explained, it is | ||
- | widely suspected that the information one | ||
- | obtains through interaction in such venues leaves | ||
- | open the possibility for distorted self-presentations | ||
- | and outright deception with respect to participants’ | ||
- | off-line characteristics. As a relationship | ||
- | develops online, there may come a point at which | ||
- | it becomes very important to interactants to have | ||
- | information that they believe reliably describes a | ||
- | partner’s off-line characteristics. This may become | ||
- | especially acute if they decide to initiate an offline | ||
- | meeting, as many online friends and prospective | ||
- | romantic partners decide to do (Parks & | ||
- | Roberts, 1998). | ||
- | The introduction of the warranting construct | ||
- | argued that an individual is less likely to distort | ||
- | his or her self-presentation when the receiver has | ||
- | access to other members of the sender’s social | ||
- | circle, since others can corroborate the individual’s | ||
- | real-life characteristics and hold that person | ||
- | accountable for misrepresentation. To increase a | ||
- | partner’s confidence in one’s self-descriptions, | ||
- | individual may make efforts to put an online | ||
- | partner in touch with members of the individual’s | ||
- | off-line network. | ||
- | The greater value of the warranting construct is | ||
- | found in its definition of what kind of information | ||
- | provides more confidence to receivers about the | ||
- | potentially true nature of an individual’s off-line | ||
- | self. From this perspective, | ||
- | be more confident about their impressions based | ||
- | on information that is more likely to warrant, or | ||
- | connect, the online persona to the off-line body | ||
- | and person (see Stone, 1995). Information is more | ||
- | likely to be seen as truthful to a receiver to the | ||
- | extent that the receiver perceives it to be “immune | ||
- | to manipulation by the person to whom it refers,” | ||
- | according to Walther and Parks (2002, p. 552). | ||
- | They argued that CMC users may take deliberate | ||
- | steps to provide online partners with information | ||
- | having relatively great warranting value by using | ||
- | links to individuals in one’s social network or | ||
- | hyperlinks to websites or archives containing information | ||
- | about the user over which the user himself | ||
- | or herself has no control. | ||
- | Recent research has provided several empirical | ||
- | tests of the warranting construct. Although | ||
- | warranting was originally conceptualized in the | ||
- | context of relationships originating in text-based | ||
- | online discussions, | ||
- | and extended the construct to contemporary | ||
- | multimedia websites in interesting ways. The first | ||
- | reference to warranting came in a study of | ||
- | impression management in online dating sites. | ||
- | Ellison et al. (2006) reported that online date | ||
- | Chapter 14: Computer-Mediated Communication and Interpersonal Relations——467 | ||
- | seekers warrant their claims about their proclivities | ||
- | or participation in certain activities by | ||
- | including photographs on their user profiles that | ||
- | depict them engaged in the activity they are | ||
- | claiming. Showing oneself rock climbing, for | ||
- | instance, would be difficult to manipulate or | ||
- | manufacture if it was not an individual’s actual | ||
- | activity (see Donath, 1999, and below). Other | ||
- | research from an online dating context (Toma | ||
- | et al., 2008) found that individuals who used | ||
- | online date-finding services distorted their online | ||
- | self-presentation to a lesser extent the more their | ||
- | off-line acquaintances knew they were using | ||
- | these services. Similarly, Warkentin et al. (2010) | ||
- | investigated whether individuals’ displays of | ||
- | information that could be used to hold them to | ||
- | account for self-presentations affected the frequency | ||
- | and degree of deception they displayed | ||
- | with respect to their claims about demographic | ||
- | characteristics and personal tastes and preferences. | ||
- | Although chat systems featured more | ||
- | deception than was present in social network | ||
- | profiles and e-mail, the presence of cues to offline | ||
- | identity in any of these platforms reduced | ||
- | the level of deception in that medium, according | ||
- | to Warkentin et al. | ||
- | Walther, Van Der Heide, Hamel, and Shulman | ||
- | (2009) tested warranting experimentally by juxtaposing | ||
- | flattering versus unflattering statements | ||
- | about an individual on mock-up Facebook profiles. | ||
- | The comments were made to appear to have | ||
- | been posted by the profile owner or by the owner’s | ||
- | Facebook friends. Facebook provides a format | ||
- | in which an individual can indicate qualities | ||
- | about himself or herself via “about me” descriptions, | ||
- | favorite quotations, current activities, and | ||
- | so on and where one’s acquaintances can also | ||
- | post comments reflecting the activities and characteristics | ||
- | of the profile host via postings on the | ||
- | host’s “wall” (and other commenting systems). | ||
- | When individuals’ suggestions about their own | ||
- | physical attractiveness (either positive and selfpromoting | ||
- | or negative and self-denigrating) | ||
- | were contradicted by the cues contained in wall | ||
- | postings from friends, observers’ ratings of the | ||
- | profile owner significantly reflected the friends’ | ||
- | comments more than the profile owner’s selfclaims. | ||
- | A replication focusing on profile owners | ||
- | and friends’ assessments of an individual’s extraversion | ||
- | provided more ambiguous results. In | ||
- | related research, an experiment that varied only | ||
- | the coefficients representing the number of | ||
- | friends a Facebook profile owner appeared to | ||
- | have found a curvilinear relationship between | ||
- | the number of one’s friends and the observers’ | ||
- | ratings of the profile owner’s popularity and | ||
- | social attractiveness (Tong, Van Der Heide, | ||
- | Langwell, & Walther, 2008). Although the sociometric | ||
- | friend coefficient did not contradict any | ||
- | particular self-generated claim of the profile | ||
- | owner, its effect nevertheless reinforces the influential | ||
- | nature of online information about a user | ||
- | that is beyond the immediate reach of the user to | ||
- | manipulate. A similar study by Utz (2010) examined | ||
- | observers’ ratings of a profile owner’s popularity | ||
- | and social attractiveness via the Dutch | ||
- | Hyves social network site. Profile mock-ups | ||
- | reflected variations in self-claims for extraversion, | ||
- | the photographically depicted extraversion | ||
- | of nine of one’s friends, and the number of | ||
- | friends a profile owner had. An interaction effect | ||
- | between the number of friends and the apparent | ||
- | extraversion of friends significantly affected the | ||
- | social attractiveness ratings of the profile owner. | ||
- | The warranting principle remains a relatively | ||
- | new construct at this time, although its empirical | ||
- | application in contemporary multimedia systems | ||
- | suggests that it is likely to see additional | ||
- | rather than decreased use. Concerns about the | ||
- | legitimacy of others’ online self-presentations | ||
- | has been a pernicious issue related to CMC since | ||
- | before the widespread diffusion of the Internet | ||
- | (see Van Gelder, 1985), and sensationalistic | ||
- | accounts of identity deception and manipulation | ||
- | still attract headlines (Labi, 2007). Likewise, as | ||
- | systems for meeting new friends and lovers shift | ||
- | from the casual discussion site to purposive | ||
- | online dating sites, concerns about others’ online | ||
- | authenticity continues (Lawson & Leck, 2006). | ||
- | Theoretical structures that help explain how | ||
- | 468——PART IV: Processes and Functions | ||
- | CMC users assess the veridicality of others’ | ||
- | online self-presentations may increase in value. | ||
- | Efficiency Framework | ||
- | A new framework was developed to resolve previously | ||
- | contradictory findings about satisfaction | ||
- | with, and the effectiveness of, CMC collaboration. | ||
- | Its investigation has incorporated very novel | ||
- | CMC technologies and has implicated presence | ||
- | as a mediating factor. | ||
- | The framework’s developers, Nowak, Watt, and | ||
- | Walther (2005, 2009), noted that many studies of | ||
- | CMC generated relatively low ratings on interpersonal | ||
- | satisfaction and related notions (typically in | ||
- | field experiments or surveys) compared with ratings | ||
- | of face-to-face communication or video communication. | ||
- | Although researchers are frequently | ||
- | aware of the known linkage between interpersonal | ||
- | cohesiveness and productivity or quality, many of | ||
- | the same studies in which CMC earned lower | ||
- | sociability ratings found no deleterious effects of | ||
- | CMC on task accomplishment. For example, | ||
- | Galagher and Kraut (1994) found that text-based | ||
- | CMC groups were less satisfied with their communication | ||
- | than video-mediated groups but that | ||
- | there were no significant differences in the quality | ||
- | of the outputs that these conditions produced. | ||
- | Research assessing CMC often relies on measurements | ||
- | of its subjective appeal and does not consider | ||
- | its instrumental utility for communicative | ||
- | tasks independently. | ||
- | Nowak et al. (2009) argue that users are likely | ||
- | to conflate their impressions of CMC’s presence | ||
- | and satisfaction with their estimates of its utility. | ||
- | Enjoyment or frustration responses override an | ||
- | individual’s objective assessment of effectiveness, | ||
- | and individuals may be expected to dislike CMC | ||
- | when there are easier alternatives (see Korzenny’s, | ||
- | 1978, electronic propinquity theory, described | ||
- | above). People are cognitive and behavioral | ||
- | misers, as Nowak et al. (2009) note, and prefer to | ||
- | do a task using less effort than using more effort. | ||
- | Compared with face-to-face communication, | ||
- | CMC is more effortful. Face-to-face communication | ||
- | is intuitive and provides rapid exchange of | ||
- | information through multiple modalities. Drawing | ||
- | on SIP theory, CMC may be just as capable as | ||
- | face-to-face interaction in achieving task and | ||
- | social outcomes, but it requires more time and | ||
- | effort, which are inherently less desirable in most | ||
- | cases than doing things in an easier way. There is | ||
- | a natural efficiency to face-to-face communication | ||
- | that is often satisfying. | ||
- | Satisfaction and utility may be unrelated, | ||
- | however, or even inversely related, depending on | ||
- | the task. When people collaborate on writing | ||
- | something together, for instance, talk is only | ||
- | useful to a point. In contrast, if collaborators | ||
- | plan, organize, and execute a writing task via the | ||
- | written (and stored and editable) medium of | ||
- | CMC, it may provide a greater efficiency in the | ||
- | long run, since things have been made recorded, | ||
- | retrievable, | ||
- | not. This process is not less effortful than talk. | ||
- | Greater effort, however, in addition to being | ||
- | frustrating, | ||
- | way, the efficiency framework attempts to | ||
- | explain how, within and across studies, CMC | ||
- | may be rated as socially unsatisfactory but, nevertheless, | ||
- | may offer instrumental benefits. To | ||
- | evaluate CMC on an affective basis alone, which | ||
- | is common, may be misleading from a utilitarian | ||
- | perspective. | ||
- | Empirical research on the efficiency framework | ||
- | has been extremely limited. One study involved | ||
- | small groups collaborating on the preparation of | ||
- | presentations for five weeks, using face-to-face | ||
- | meetings, text-based real-time chats at specific | ||
- | times, asynchronous text-based conferencing, | ||
- | real-time videoconferencing, | ||
- | video communication system that allowed members | ||
- | to record, leave, and play multimodal messages | ||
- | to and from one another (Nowak et al., | ||
- | 2009). Consistent with previous research and | ||
- | the efficiency framework’s predictions, | ||
- | questionnaires showed higher scores | ||
- | on presence and conversational involvement for | ||
- | face-to-face communication above all other conditions. | ||
- | A greater number of cue systems also | ||
- | led to greater subjective project quality and satisfaction, | ||
- | as did synchronous (compared with | ||
- | Chapter 14: Computer-Mediated Communication and Interpersonal Relations——469 | ||
- | asynchronous) media. With respect to the objective | ||
- | quality of their projects, however, external | ||
- | coders’ ratings identified the asynchronous video | ||
- | condition as having facilitated the best actual | ||
- | work, with no other differences between conditions. | ||
- | Real-time versus asynchronous comparisons | ||
- | did not affect the quality of the work. | ||
- | Although this perspective seems especially | ||
- | suited for the study of mediated collaborations, | ||
- | its central lessons may apply to a variety of | ||
- | interpersonal as well as instrumental settings as | ||
- | media characteristics evolve: Those media that | ||
- | are the easiest to use may not, in fact, offer | ||
- | the greatest instrumental benefit. As interface | ||
- | options increase and become more natural, | ||
- | more research will be needed that separates | ||
- | affective reactions from those pertaining to | ||
- | interaction goals. In strictly recreational social | ||
- | settings, these two aspects—social and purposive | ||
- | outcomes—may be isomorphic. As new | ||
- | electronic media such as avatar-based systems | ||
- | and desktop video are employed for an increasing | ||
- | number of activities, including the common | ||
- | instrumentalities that make up so much of the | ||
- | maintenance of ongoing relationships, | ||
- | easier is better or not, will deserve continued | ||
- | reexamination. | ||
- | ICT Succession | ||
- | Perhaps the most recent new framework about | ||
- | CMC is Stephens’s (2007) prescriptive formulation | ||
- | involving the strategic sequencing of messages | ||
- | across multiple communication channels. | ||
- | This approach recognizes different forms of | ||
- | information and communication technologies | ||
- | (ICTs), including traditional media, face-to-face | ||
- | channels, and newer forms of CMC. It primarily | ||
- | concerns how combinations of ICTs predict | ||
- | communication effectiveness in organizational | ||
- | communication, | ||
- | related to the use of the media for “tasks that are | ||
- | personal and social in nature” (p. 499). | ||
- | In terms of its structure, the ICT succession | ||
- | model presents several propositions inferred by | ||
- | the author from principles and findings in a wide | ||
- | variety of literatures, | ||
- | from a set of related higher order constructs. The | ||
- | major theoretical terms of the model can be | ||
- | identified as (a) successive (vs. single) message | ||
- | transmissions and (b) complementary (vs. singular) | ||
- | channel usage. The central proposition of the | ||
- | model is that the repetition of a message through | ||
- | two different types of communication channels | ||
- | causes the greatest communication effectiveness | ||
- | and efficiency (for certain types of tasks). For | ||
- | example, a message sent once face-to-face might | ||
- | be followed up by e-mail, or vice versa, which | ||
- | should be more effective than repeating messages | ||
- | using a single medium (or no repetitions at all). | ||
- | Among these terms and relationships, | ||
- | versus successive messaging is easily defined: | ||
- | A communicator may send a message once or | ||
- | send it more than once. The definition of complementary | ||
- | modalities is less clear. The model | ||
- | reflects a variety of different approaches to identify | ||
- | groupings of channels based on criteria | ||
- | found in other CMC theories as well as in perceptual | ||
- | studies of media uses and gratifications | ||
- | (Flanagin & Metzger, 2001), rather than on the | ||
- | basis of some underlying functional property. It | ||
- | clusters channels into the following groups: faceto-face, | ||
- | mass media, oral media, or textual media. | ||
- | Although a proposition refers to “maximizing | ||
- | modalities through complementary successive | ||
- | ICT use” (Stephens, 2007, p. 496), the theory | ||
- | does not indicate what kind of combinations | ||
- | among different ICT groups would be optimally | ||
- | complementary. It may be that the use of two | ||
- | nominally different ICTs constitutes sufficient | ||
- | complementarity, | ||
- | address the superiority of mass media as an initial | ||
- | medium and elsewhere the benefit of textbased | ||
- | media for subsequent messages. | ||
- | The ICT succession model received mixed | ||
- | empirical support in a recent experiment | ||
- | (Stephens & Rains, 2011). Research confederates | ||
- | either e-mailed a persuasive message to participants | ||
- | encouraging them to use the career services | ||
- | center at their universities or read the message | ||
- | face-to-face to the participant. A few minutes | ||
- | later, based on the experimental condition, one | ||
- | 470——PART IV: Processes and Functions | ||
- | of several events transpired: (a) a confederate | ||
- | then communicated a second message, with different | ||
- | content, that also advocated using the | ||
- | career services center, using either the same | ||
- | channel (e-mail or face-to-face) as the first message | ||
- | or the other of the two channels, or (b) a | ||
- | confederate provided a message about a different | ||
- | topic using one or other of the media combinations. | ||
- | This experimental design allowed the | ||
- | researchers to examine the influence of media | ||
- | succession on outcomes independently of the | ||
- | effect of the simple addition of more persuasive | ||
- | arguments. Results revealed significantly greater | ||
- | intention to use the career services center when | ||
- | messages were conveyed using complementary | ||
- | successive messages than when other message/ | ||
- | media combinations were used, although attitudes | ||
- | (rather than intentions), | ||
- | effectiveness perceptions, | ||
- | among the conditions as predicted. Complementary | ||
- | media effects overrode the simple | ||
- | effects of being exposed to multiple messages. | ||
- | In one sense, the ICT succession theory offers | ||
- | a modest digital-age update and elaboration to | ||
- | conventional suggestions. As Koehler, Anatol, | ||
- | and Applbaum wrote in their 1976 organizational | ||
- | communication textbook, “We suggest | ||
- | that a combination of oral and written (printed) | ||
- | media are more effective in achieving employee | ||
- | understanding than either oral or written messages | ||
- | alone” (p. 204). The initial empirical | ||
- | research compared two media that are rather | ||
- | conventional by current standards, and despite | ||
- | the Stephens and Rains (2011) article’s title | ||
- | alluding to interpersonal interaction, | ||
- | processes per se seem to have been | ||
- | involved. Nevertheless, | ||
- | researchers’ discussion of the model offer a | ||
- | glimpse at research to come that may expand the | ||
- | scope of the predictions beyond conventional | ||
- | wisdom or first-generation Internet applications. | ||
- | When the authors point out that “ICTs such as | ||
- | mobile phones, e-mail, text messaging, and | ||
- | instant messaging have made it increasingly possible | ||
- | to communicate repeated messages over | ||
- | time” (p. 102), they open the door to the discovery | ||
- | of media selection strategies that may go well | ||
- | beyond choices based on differences in the number | ||
- | of code systems supported by different media. | ||
- | How communication partners may choose | ||
- | among many more options than simply just written | ||
- | versus oral ones may be an interesting focus | ||
- | of inquiry and illuminate much about communicators’ | ||
- | literacies, opportunities, | ||
- | and communication strategies. These issues will | ||
- | bear repeated attention across both organizational | ||
- | and relational contexts such as the development | ||
- | of friendships, | ||
- | conflict, and perhaps relational dissolution. The | ||
- | issue of multimodality is addressed more fully | ||
- | below, after some other concluding observations. | ||
- | Challenges to CMC Research | ||
- | This review ends with some notes of concern | ||
- | about current trends in CMC research. These | ||
- | concerns focus on three issues: (1) the increasing | ||
- | neglect of off-line comparisons in CMC studies, | ||
- | potentially undermining broad theoretical | ||
- | understanding and leading to potentially inflated | ||
- | views of CMC’s effects; (2) how and whether new | ||
- | technologies affect the utility of theories that | ||
- | were developed in the context of somewhat older | ||
- | technological contexts; and (3) how we study | ||
- | interpersonal communication when many relationships | ||
- | are radically multimodal. | ||
- | There appears to be an increasing tendency for | ||
- | CMC research to focus on different features and | ||
- | different users of CMC and not to make comparisons | ||
- | with face-to-face communication or communication | ||
- | using other traditional media. This trend | ||
- | is supported by different disciplinary orientations | ||
- | about what questions should concern us and by the | ||
- | development of research tools that make CMC | ||
- | much easier to analyze than its off-line counterpart. | ||
- | For a number of years, many researchers have | ||
- | extolled the end of the face-to-face “gold standard” | ||
- | for CMC research (for a review, see Nardi & | ||
- | Whittaker, 2002), meaning that online behavior | ||
- | itself is a legitimate and significant focus of study | ||
- | and that descriptions of it, or comparisons of different | ||
- | interfaces or users, are sufficiently interesting | ||
- | without having to compare observations of online | ||
- | Chapter 14: Computer-Mediated Communication and Interpersonal Relations——471 | ||
- | to off-line behavior. Technology design research, | ||
- | for example, may largely be uninformed by what | ||
- | happens off-line, since its focus is on the discovery | ||
- | of technology users’ needs and preferences and the | ||
- | evaluation of technology features that optimally | ||
- | address those criteria. | ||
- | Additionally, | ||
- | in the development of low-cost computer programs | ||
- | that provide powerful analyses of digitally | ||
- | represented behavior. In particular, language | ||
- | analysis programs that can be applied to large | ||
- | corpuses of digital texts have made online behavior | ||
- | more amenable to analysis and made textual | ||
- | analysis far less onerous than it previously was. | ||
- | The ease, cost, availability, | ||
- | applications make them very appealing. At the | ||
- | same time, their availability may privilege analysis | ||
- | of the kind of digital primary data to which | ||
- | the programs are especially well suited and facilitate | ||
- | disregard for the analysis of analog face-toface | ||
- | interaction recordings, which require | ||
- | significant resources to transcribe and/or prepare | ||
- | for digital analysis. | ||
- | These factors, as well as others, may be promoting | ||
- | the analysis of online interpersonal | ||
- | behavior more frequently and of off-line behavior | ||
- | less so. Although to many of us the dynamics | ||
- | of organic online behavior are often quite interesting, | ||
- | the lack of comparison with off-line | ||
- | behaviors has the potential to lead to artificial | ||
- | conclusions. We may infer support using native | ||
- | digital sources for theoretically universal effects | ||
- | when the effects are limited. We may likewise | ||
- | conclude that certain behaviors are primarily or | ||
- | exclusively the result of various qualities of | ||
- | media, but without comparison with off-line | ||
- | behavior that may exhibit similar patterns, such | ||
- | conclusions may be fallacious and misleading. | ||
- | Second, questions arise whether new technologies | ||
- | should lead us to retire theories that | ||
- | were developed in light of other, older technologies. | ||
- | Good ways to ask these questions examine | ||
- | the boundary conditions and scope of extant | ||
- | theories. We should always assess how the topography | ||
- | of new technologies’ features meet or | ||
- | violate the assumptions of a theory. As discussed | ||
- | above, theories that were premised on the lack of | ||
- | visual information about one’s partners may not | ||
- | hold as much utility for multimedia interfaces. | ||
- | At the same time, advances in technologyenabled | ||
- | social arrangements allow us to see if | ||
- | theories can stretch their original assumptive | ||
- | boundaries. Human and Lane (2008), for | ||
- | instance, have appropriated elements of electronic | ||
- | propinquity theory and the hyperpersonal | ||
- | model to try to account for the idealization | ||
- | that emerges through the online communication | ||
- | that takes place between the occasional face-toface | ||
- | meetings of geographically separated offline | ||
- | relational partners. Exploring the degree to | ||
- | which the processes implicated in older models | ||
- | may be reconfigured for newer media presents | ||
- | intriguing possibilities (as is demonstrably the | ||
- | case with electronic propinquity theory). To the | ||
- | extent that the older media’s boundary conditions | ||
- | continue to appear within other, newer | ||
- | systems, the vitality of the theories remains even | ||
- | if the scope of their application declines. When | ||
- | multimedia news stories or videos appear in a | ||
- | Web 2.0 application but are accompanied by | ||
- | user-generated comments appearing as anonymous, | ||
- | plain-text messages, for example, theories | ||
- | premised on unimodal media and focused on | ||
- | anonymity remain quite potent with respect to | ||
- | the effects of the comments. | ||
- | Finally, just as the previous Handbook suggested | ||
- | that relationships may develop through | ||
- | multiple modalities (Walther & Parks, 2002), | ||
- | many researchers have come to suggest that interpersonal | ||
- | communication research must explicitly | ||
- | recognize that contemporary relationships are | ||
- | not conducted through one medium or another | ||
- | but often through a great variety of channels. | ||
- | Multimodality has become the primary channel | ||
- | characteristic of interpersonal relationships: | ||
- | We conduct our relationships face-to-face, | ||
- | over the phone, and online through modes | ||
- | as diverse as e-mail, instant messaging, | ||
- | social network friending, personal messages, | ||
- | comments, shared participation in | ||
- | discussion forums and online games, and | ||
- | the sharing of digital photos, music, and | ||
- | videos. (Baym, 2009, p. 721) | ||
- | 472——PART IV: Processes and Functions | ||
- | Research has yet to conceptualize what this means | ||
- | for the study of relationships, | ||
- | media ecologies (e.g., Barnes, 2009), the implications | ||
- | of which are not yet clear beyond phenomenological | ||
- | levels. Even advocates of a multimodal | ||
- | perspective at times do no more than survey individuals | ||
- | about the use of all their Internet and | ||
- | mobile applications and enter their total new technology | ||
- | use as one undifferentiated predictor variable | ||
- | comparing new technology, old media, and | ||
- | face-to-face interaction on relational outcomes of | ||
- | some kind. In contrast, other researchers have | ||
- | advanced good questions based on established | ||
- | theories applied to new media to describe and | ||
- | explain the disappointing effects of moving a new | ||
- | relationship from online to off-line and back (e.g., | ||
- | Ramirez & Wang, 2008; Ramirez & Zhang, 2007). | ||
- | We will need new theoretical concepts with | ||
- | which to describe the functional attributes of | ||
- | groups of technologies. Qualities such as the | ||
- | opportunistic availability of different media (e.g., | ||
- | texting or mobile-enabled microblogging) may | ||
- | be such a concept. Economy of effort may be a | ||
- | useful property with which to describe social | ||
- | media that allow one to contribute to the maintenance | ||
- | of numerous relationships with a single | ||
- | message. Knowing which applications provide | ||
- | asymmetrical interpersonal information-seeking | ||
- | (I can Google you without you knowing it) or | ||
- | symmetrical requirements (You have to grant me | ||
- | access to your Facebook profile before you can | ||
- | see mine) may be a useful frame, depending on | ||
- | the theoretical questions these phenomena | ||
- | arouse. It is also likely that different media are | ||
- | used in functional, strategic sequences (beyond | ||
- | repetition) that may illuminate relational patterns. | ||
- | Our chapter in the previous Handbook | ||
- | quoted Mitchell (1995): “Hacker lore has it that | ||
- | burgeoning cyberspace romances progress | ||
- | through broadening bandwidth and multiplying | ||
- | modalities—from exchange of e-mail to phone | ||
- | and photo, then taking the big step of going | ||
- | (face-to-face), | ||
- | Lore aside, technology sequences and their relational | ||
- | significance deserve an update: If a man | ||
- | takes an interest in a woman he sees in a class, he | ||
- | may want to scan the Web for information about | ||
- | her. If that search suggests potential reward, he | ||
- | may talk to her to establish a minimal basis of | ||
- | familiarity so that he can request access to her | ||
- | social network profile and be able to see how | ||
- | many friends she has, what they look like, what | ||
- | their comments have to say about her, and how | ||
- | she interacts with them in turn. If results are | ||
- | encouraging, | ||
- | come next, followed by a reinforcing e-mail or | ||
- | social network posting. Do increases in channel | ||
- | access signify relational escalation? Do we meet | ||
- | new partners’ Flickr family photo collection | ||
- | before we meet the parents, and why? Rather | ||
- | than resign ourselves to undifferentiated, | ||
- | multimodality, | ||
- | the strategic and interpersonal signification | ||
- | possibilities it presents as its users exploit | ||
- | the vast relational potentials of CMC. | ||
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- | Press. | ||
- | Walther, J. B. (1992). Interpersonal effects in computer-mediated | ||
- | interaction: | ||
- | Communication Research, 19, 52–90. | ||
- | Walther, J. B. (1996). Computer-mediated communication: | ||
- | Impersonal, interpersonal, | ||
- | interaction. Communication Research, 23, 3–43. | ||
- | Walther, J. B. (2006). Nonverbal dynamics in computermediated | ||
- | communication, | ||
- | with you, :) and you :) alone. In V. Manusov & | ||
- | M. L. Patterson (Eds.), Handbook of nonverbal | ||
- | communication (pp. 461–479). Thousand Oaks, | ||
- | CA: Sage. | ||
- | Walther, J. B. (2007). Selective self-presentation in | ||
- | computer-mediated communication: | ||
- | dimensions of technology, language, and | ||
- | cognition. Computers in Human Behavior, 23, | ||
- | 2538–2557. | ||
- | Walther, J. B. (2009). Theories, boundaries, and all of | ||
- | the above. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, | ||
- | 14, 748–752. | ||
- | Walther, J. B. (2010). Computer-mediated communication. | ||
- | In C. R. Berger, M. E. Roloff, & D. R. RoskosEwoldsen | ||
- | (Eds.), Handbook of communication science | ||
- | (2nd ed., pp. 489–505). Thousand Oaks: Sage. | ||
- | Walther, J. B., & Bazarova, N. (2008). Validation and | ||
- | application of electronic propinquity theory to | ||
- | computer-mediated communication in groups. | ||
- | Communication Research, 35, 622–645. | ||
- | Walther, J. B., & Carr, C. T. (2010). Internet interaction | ||
- | and intergroup dynamics: Problems and solutions | ||
- | in computer-mediated communication. In | ||
- | H. Giles, S. Reid, & J. Harwood (Eds.), The dynamics | ||
- | of intergroup communication (pp. 209–220). | ||
- | New York: Peter Lang. | ||
- | Walther, J. B., DeAndrea, D., Kim, J., & Anthony, J. (2010). | ||
- | The influence of online comments on perceptions | ||
- | of anti-marijuana public service announcements | ||
- | on YouTube. Human Communication Research, 36, | ||
- | 469–492. | ||
- | Walther, J. B., DeAndrea, D. C., & Tong, S. T. (2010). | ||
- | Computer-mediated communication versus | ||
- | vocal communication in the amelioration of preinteraction | ||
- | stereotypes: | ||
- | assumptions, | ||
- | research. Media Psychology, 13, 364–386. | ||
- | Walther, J. B., Liang, Y., DeAndrea, D. C., Tong, S. T., | ||
- | Carr, C. T., Spottswood, E. L., et al. (2011). The | ||
- | effect of feedback on identity shift in computermediated | ||
- | communication. Media Psychology, 14, | ||
- | 1–26. | ||
- | Walther, J. B., Loh, T., & Granka, L. (2005). Let me | ||
- | count the ways: The interchange of verbal and | ||
- | nonverbal cues in computer-mediated and faceto-face | ||
- | affinity. Journal of Language and Social | ||
- | Psychology, 24, 36–65. | ||
- | Walther, J. B., & Parks, M. R. (2002). Cues filtered | ||
- | out, cues filtered in: Computer-mediated communication | ||
- | and relationships. In M. L. Knapp & | ||
- | J. A. Daly (Eds.), Handbook of interpersonal communication | ||
- | (3rd ed., pp. 529–563). Thousand | ||
- | Oaks, CA: Sage. | ||
- | Walther, J. B., Van Der Heide, B., Hamel, L., & | ||
- | Shulman, H. (2009). Self-generated versus othergenerated | ||
- | statements and impressions in computermediated | ||
- | communication: | ||
- | theory using Facebook. Communication Research, | ||
- | 36, 229–253. | ||
- | Walther, J. B., Van Der Heide, B., Tong, S. T., Carr, C. T., | ||
- | & Atkin, C. K. (2010). The effects of interpersonal | ||
- | goals on inadvertent intrapersonal influence in | ||
- | computer-mediated communication. Human | ||
- | Communication Research, 36, 323–347. | ||
- | Wang, Z. (2007, November). Interpersonal and group | ||
- | level measures in attraction and group identification: | ||
- | A factor analysis approach. Paper presented | ||
- | at the annual meeting of the National Communication | ||
- | Association, | ||
- | Wang, Z., Walther, J. B., & Hancock, J. T. (2009). Social | ||
- | identification and interpersonal communication | ||
- | in computer-mediated communication: | ||
- | do versus who you are in virtual groups. Human | ||
- | Communication Research, 35, 59–85. | ||
- | Warkentin, D., Woodworth, M., Hancock, J. T., & | ||
- | Cormier, N. (2010). Warrants and deception in | ||
- | Chapter 14: Computer-Mediated Communication and Interpersonal Relations——479 | ||
- | computer-mediated communication. In K. Inkpen | ||
- | & C. Gutwin (Eds.), Proceedings of the 2010 ACM | ||
- | Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative | ||
- | Work (pp. 9–12). New York: ACM. | ||
- | Westerman, D. K., Van Der Heide, B., Klein, K. A., & | ||
- | Walther, J. B. (2008). How do people really seek | ||
- | information about others? Information seeking | ||
- | across Internet and traditional communication | ||
- | sources. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, | ||
- | 13, 751–767. | ||
- | Whitty, M. (2008). Revealing the “real” me, searching | ||
- | for the “actual” you: Presentations of self on an | ||
- | Internet dating site. Computers in Human Behavior, | ||
- | 24, 1707–1723. | ||
- | Whitty, M., & Carr, A. (2006). Cyberspace romance: The | ||
- | psychology of online relationships. New York: Palgrave | ||
- | MacMillan. | ||
- | Wilson, J. M., Straus, S. G., & McEvily, W. J. (2006). | ||
- | All in due time: The development of trust in | ||
- | computer-mediated and face-to-face groups. | ||
- | Organizational Behavior and Human Decision | ||
- | Processes, 99, 16–33. | ||
- | Wright, K. B., & Webb, L. M. (Eds.). (2011). Computermediated | ||
- | communication in personal relationships. | ||
- | New York: Peter Lang. | ||
- | Yzer, M. C., & Southwell, B. G. (2008). New communication | ||
- | technologies, | ||
- | Behavioral Scientist, 25, 8–20. |
theories_of_computer_mediated_communication_and_interpersonal_relations.1496879141.txt.gz · Last modified: 2017/06/08 08:15 by hkimscil