看不见了,……视频会议中的不对称如何影响社交互动

Camille Sallaberry, Gwenn Englebienne, Jan Van Erp, Vanessa Evers
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引用次数: 0

摘要

随着社交媒介互动变得越来越重要和多模式,甚至扩展到虚拟现实和机器人化身的物理远程呈现,新的挑战出现了。例如,视频通话已经成为常态,人们越来越普遍地经历一种形式的不对称,例如由于连接问题而无法听到或看到他们的通信伙伴在线。以前的研究还没有广泛探讨对社会互动的影响。在这项研究中,61对夫妇,即122名成年人,使用视频会议平台玩了一个类似测验的游戏,并通过测量社会存在的五个子量表来评估他们的社会互动质量。二人组可以对称地获取社交线索(只有音频,或者音频和视频),也可以不对称地获取社交线索(一方只接收音频,另一方只接收音频和视频)。我们的研究结果表明,在不对称访问的情况下,从另一方接收到更多形式(即音频和视频)的一方,明显比他们的伴侣感到更少的联系。我们将这些结果与媒体丰富度理论(MRT)和超个人模型进行讨论:在不对称中,更多的形式或线索不一定会增加社会联系感,这与MRT预测的相反。我们假设,发送更少线索的参与者通过增加他们表达的丰富程度来补偿,并且互动向两个参与者的同等丰富程度转变。
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Out of Sight,... How Asymmetry in Video-Conference Affects Social Interaction
As social-mediated interaction is becoming increasingly important and multi-modal, even expanding into virtual reality and physical telepresence with robotic avatars, new challenges emerge. For instance, video calls have become the norm and it is increasingly common that people experience a form of asymmetry, such as not being heard or seen by their communication partners online due to connection issues. Previous research has not yet extensively explored the effect on social interaction. In this study, 61 Dyads, i.e. 122 adults, played a quiz-like game using a video-conferencing platform and evaluated the quality of their social interaction by measuring five sub-scales of social presence. The Dyads had either symmetrical access to social cues (both only audio, or both audio and video) or asymmetrical access (one partner receiving only audio, the other audio and video). Our results showed that in the case of asymmetrical access, the party receiving more modalities, i.e. audio and video from the other, felt significantly less connected than their partner. We discuss these results in relation to the Media Richness Theory (MRT) and the Hyperpersonal Model: in asymmetry, more modalities or cues will not necessarily increase feeling socially connected, in opposition to what was predicted by MRT. We hypothesize that participants sending fewer cues compensate by increasing the richness of their expressions and that the interaction shifts towards an equivalent richness for both participants.
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