RS- Virtual Relationships Flashcards
What are virtual relationships?
Virtual relationships are relationships that are conducted through the internet rather than face to face, for example through social media.
What can virtual relationships also be referred as?
Computer Mediated Communication
What is the reduced cues theory?
- Sproull and Kessler (1986) suggest that CMC relationships are less effective than face-to-face relationships.
- This is because there is an absence of non-verbal communication cues such as tone of voice, facial expressions and so on.
What does the absence of non-verbal cues lead to? (Reduced cue theory)
- It leads to de-individuation, where a person feels a reduced sense of individuality and a lowering of personal standards of behaviour.
- Therefore, CMC relationships are more likely to include impersonal, possibly aggressive communication and reluctance to self-disclose.
Evaluate the reduced cues theory.
ADVANTAGES
1) There is a great deal of research evidence support to show that disinhibition and deindividuation occur in real life and this can be applied to real people.
- There has been a great deal of research to show that people go online and “troll” others and send unpleasant messages that they would otherwise not say in real life and face to face. (+)
2) Joinson placed students in same sex pairs and asked to discuss a dilemma that required conversation. Results found that there was significantly more self-disclosure using the computer chat program than face to face.
Evaluate the reduced cues theory. (DISADVANTAGES)
1) Reduced cues theory may be inaccurate, as it has been argued that there are different types of cues in CMC, rather than an absence of them.
- These include style and timing of messages, use of exclamation marks and capital letters, emojis and so on.
- Online communication has clearly been successful, which reduced cues theory would find difficult to explain.
What is absence of gating in virtual relationships?
- A ‘gate’ is an obstacle to the formation and development of a relationship.
- For example, physical unattractiveness, shyness or anxiety.
- McKenna and Bargh (1999) suggest that such gates are absence in CMC relationships, so it becomes easier for relationships to begin and quickly become intimate.
- The focus is on what the person is saying, for example through self-disclosure, rather than what they look like.
- Absence of gating also means that people are free to create online ‘personas’ quite different from their real lives.
Evaluate absence of gating. (ADVANTAGES)
1) Mckenna and Bargh conducted research where first ppts first interacted with a partner in person for 20 minutes or via internet chat rooms first before meeting face to face.
- It was found that partners clearly liked each other more when they met via the internet and communication was seen more intimate.
- The absence of gating means a relationship can develop as self-disclosure becomes more frequent and deeper.