DocumentCode
1245410
Title
Multimethod approaches for the study of computer-mediated communication, equivocality, and media selection
Author
D´Ambra, John ; Rice, Ronald E.
Author_Institution
Sch. of Inf. Syst., New South Wales Univ., Kensington, NSW, Australia
Volume
37
Issue
4
fYear
1994
fDate
12/1/1994 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
231
Lastpage
239
Abstract
This paper presents a longitudinal case study of the introduction of voice mail, applying media richness theory to develop and assess a set of 16 tasks with varying levels of equivocality, and to compare different media. Through t-tests, reliability, factor, and multidimensional scaling analyses, evaluation of task equivocality and voice mail is discussed and potential shortcomings of current approaches are highlighted. Results show that equivocality does not seem to be unidimensional and includes aspects of authority across organizational boundaries. Across all tasks, telephone would be most likely selected by respondents, but face-to-face and telephone were more likely to be selected for more equivocal tasks. Unlike prior studies, voice mail is perceived as similar to documents and face-to-face
Keywords
electronic mail; office automation; systems analysis; voice mail; computer-mediated communication; documents; equivocality; face-to-face communication; factor analysis; longitudinal case study; media richness theory; media selection; multidimensional scaling analyses; multimethod approaches; organizational boundaries; reliability; t-tests; task equivocality; telephone; voice mail; Computer mediated communication; Constraint theory; Documentation; Feedback; Humans; Multidimensional systems; Speech analysis; Telephony; Time factors; Voice mail;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Professional Communication, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0361-1434
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/47.365170
Filename
365170
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