Face-to-face and video-mediated communication: A comparison of dialogue structure and task performance. 论文

1997Journal of Experimental Psychology Applied引用 269
Speech and dialogue systemsTeam Dynamics and PerformanceLanguage, Discourse, Communication Strategies

摘要

This article examined communication and task performance in face-to-face, copresent, and video-mediated communication (VMC). Study 1 showed that when participants in a collaborative problem-solving task could see and hear each other, the structure of their dialogues differed compared with dialogues obtained when they only heard each other. The audio-only conversations had more words, and these extra utterances often provided and elicited verbal feedback functions, which visual signals can deliver when available. Study 2, however, showed that high-quality VMC did not appear to deliver the same benefits as face-to-face, copresent interaction. It appears that novelty, attenuation, and remoteness all may have contributed to the effects found-factors that should be considered by designers of remote video-conferencing systems.

相关技术

暂无数据

相关事件

暂无数据

相关文章

暂无数据