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Coye Cheshire & Andrew Fiore June 29, 2015 // Computer-Mediated Communication Social perception and interpretation
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6/29/2015Computer-Mediated Communication — Cheshire & Fiore1 “The sensorial parsimony of plain text tends to entice users into engaging their imaginations to fill in missing details while, comparatively speaking, the richness of stimuli in fancy [systems] has an opposite tendency, pushing users’ imaginations into a more passive role.” — Curtis (1992)
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6/29/2015Computer-Mediated Communication — Cheshire & Fiore2 designers Social shaping of technology
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6/29/2015Computer-Mediated Communication — Cheshire & Fiore4 Forming impressions in CMC “Cognitive misers”: Making the most of limited cues Social Information Processing (Walther) Reciprocal re-use of what they notice in others
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6/29/2015Computer-Mediated Communication — Cheshire & Fiore5 Strategic vs. authentic self-presentation Anticipated future interaction?
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6/29/2015Computer-Mediated Communication — Cheshire & Fiore6 Is it deception? Or is it… Misperception of self (foggy mirror) Different readings of ambiguous labels Self-enhancement (not intent to deceive) Circumvention of technological constraints
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6/29/2015Computer-Mediated Communication — Cheshire & Fiore7 Some points on methodology Inductive vs. deductive research Theoretical sampling Why not use random sampling? Semi-structured interviews “Coding” responses
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6/29/2015Computer-Mediated Communication — Cheshire & Fiore10 Stylistic differences by gender Men Assertions Self-promotion Rhetorical questions Profanity Sexual references Sarcasm Challenges Insults Women Hedges Justifications Expressions of emotion Smiling/laughter Personal pronouns Supportive language Polite language
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6/29/2015Computer-Mediated Communication — Cheshire & Fiore11 Turing Test Proposed by Alan Turing in 1950 Machine “passes” if it is indistinguishable from a human in synchronous textual communication
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6/29/2015Computer-Mediated Communication — Cheshire & Fiore19 Herring & Martinson findings Performers employ stereotypical features Discourse styles: more reliable, hard to fake? Real-life gender shows through Performers were no better at portraying their own gender than the other gender! How can this be?
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