About five years ago, I once enjoyed talking to random people online. ‘buddybuddy.com’ was Korean website that I usually went to meet new people. In buddybuddy.com, there were hundreds of chatrooms, forums and online communities. Buddybuddy.com also had its own instant messenger program, so if you made friends there, you could add them on your messenger program and talk to them if they were online. This is when I met a guy named hwang912. On that day, among the chatrooms categorized by age, I went to the one for teens. Inside the chatroom, there were about four people talking. hwang912 was one of them. As usual, all of us told our asl. hwang912 was a year older than me, living in
Common ground means mutually shared beliefs, assumptions and propositions. This can be divided into conversational and categorical common ground. As a result of common ground, people find others more attractive as they share more common grounds.(Lecture Slide) As we kept talking we found out that we had common interest in old Korean pops. In our first conversation, we already had three things in common: nationality, age and interest in old pop songs. These categorical common grounds made it much easier for us to connect to each other and to continue our conversation. I remember we spent almost five hours in our first conversation. At the end, we gave each other email address and nickname for the instant messenger.
After the first talk is when proximity started playing a major role in developing this relationship. “Familiarity breeds attraction” shows how proximity takes place in relationship and interpersonal attraction very well. As friendly as person A becomes to person B, B finds A more attractive and desires to continue or even strengthen the relationship with A. In online spaces, proximity is measured differently from FtF. Online familiarity flows from intersection frequency. (Lecture Slide) After the first conversation, we kept talking on the instant messenger and sending emails to each other. At first, we talked almost every day. Because of a fourteen-hour difference between
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You did a great job explaining Wallace’s two attraction factors of proximity and common ground and connecting them both to the SIP theory. I think it was really interesting to see that you both made consequences (staying up late/getting up early) just so you could talk to each other because of the time difference. I think that that is also evidence for the Hyperpersonal model because it shows how relationships can form online and be both deep and meaningful rather than cold, distant, and negative. You really showed how online proximity can easily overcome physical proximity through the intersection frequency that you had with hwang912.
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