In my junior high school year in
Yoonjung’s experience is consistent with the results discussed in the Ramirez & Wang paper. This case was examined under Hypothesis 4 that MS following a short-term association via CMC will provide social information that will be evaluated more positively and uncertainty-reducing than interacting via CMC (Ramirez & Wang, 2004). In total, Yoonjung and her boyfriend had about only five or six times of conversation before MS to FtF. So, this case can be considered as STA. Based on Hyperpersonal perspective, spending relatively short time online lets both communicators to less idealize or over-attribute partner’s image. Then, encountering real person in FtF interaction would likely yield less disappointment. Therefore, social information provided by MS has high likelihood to be evaluated positively and positive impressions help communicators to reduce uncertainty as Yoonjung and her boyfriend liked each other more after MS. As Ramirez & Wang discussed in their paper, timing was an important factor in my friend’s case. If they exchanged more personal information for a long period of time, they should have developed a strong over-attributed impression of each other. MS to FtF would likely show that their partner was actually a normal, common student, then, expectancy violation would be incongruent with past information or impression they have been building. As EVT predicted, it increases uncertainty and has relationship-dampening effects. There was one more factor which played a major role in this case: exchange of each other’s photo. People in this website used picture as their best tool to glamorize themselves. Yoonjung and her boyfriend also had their best picture up online. So, this very selective self-representation encouraged them to develop positively over-attributed impression of their partner.
1 comment:
my comments:
http://comm245green.blogspot.com/2007/11/110-roommate-from-hell.html
http://comm245green.blogspot.com/2007/11/do-not-leave-virtuality.html
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