Framing Communication: How Agenda Alignment and Media Capabilities Shape Partially Cooperative Communication

MIS Q. Pub Date : 2020-06-01 DOI:10.25300/MISQ/2020/15062
Andrew J. Harrison, J. Windeler
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

People frame their communications to suit their personal agendas, even when they are collaborating. However, most information systems (IS) literature assumes people working together have completely aligned agendas. The assumption of agenda alignment in prior research motivates our examination of how agendas and media capabilities influence communication performance. By relaxing the assumption of complete agenda alignment, we reconceptualize how media capabilities interact with communication processes to influence communication performance. We empirically test our model using a lab study with 712 participants interacting face-to-face or via virtual worlds on tasks with differing degrees of agenda alignment. We used a hierarchical linear modeling approach to test our hypotheses. Our results support the role of media synchronicity for explaining communication performance when agendas are aligned. However, our study shows that relaxing the assumption of agenda alignment changes communication in profound ways. We find that media synchronicity is insufficient for describing how media capabilities influence performance in partially cooperative communication contexts. Our findings reveal the importance of anonymity and communication framing when communicants’ agendas differ.
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框架传播:议程对齐和媒体能力如何塑造部分合作传播
即使是在合作的时候,人们也会根据自己的个人议程来安排沟通方式。然而,大多数信息系统(IS)文献假设一起工作的人们有完全一致的议程。先前研究中的议程一致性假设激发了我们对议程和媒体能力如何影响传播绩效的研究。通过放松完全议程一致性的假设,我们重新定义了媒体能力如何与沟通过程相互作用以影响沟通绩效。我们通过一项实验室研究对我们的模型进行了实证测试,712名参与者在不同程度的议程一致性任务上进行了面对面或虚拟世界的互动。我们使用层次线性建模方法来检验我们的假设。我们的研究结果支持媒体同步性在解释议程一致时的沟通绩效方面的作用。然而,我们的研究表明,放松议程一致性的假设会对沟通产生深远的影响。我们发现媒体同步性不足以描述媒体能力如何在部分合作的通信环境中影响性能。我们的研究结果表明,当沟通者的议程不同时,匿名性和沟通框架的重要性。
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