Audience design through social interaction during group discussion.

This paper contrasts two accounts of audience design during multiparty communication: audience design as a strategic individual-level message adjustment or as a non-strategic interaction-level message adjustment. Using a non-interactive communication task, Experiment 1 showed that people distinguish...

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Autores principales: Shane L Rogers, Nicolas Fay, Murray Maybery
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Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/59ac0bb4f77040b2b71f6bdf9d197811
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:59ac0bb4f77040b2b71f6bdf9d1978112021-11-18T07:56:30ZAudience design through social interaction during group discussion.1932-620310.1371/journal.pone.0057211https://doaj.org/article/59ac0bb4f77040b2b71f6bdf9d1978112013-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/23437343/pdf/?tool=EBIhttps://doaj.org/toc/1932-6203This paper contrasts two accounts of audience design during multiparty communication: audience design as a strategic individual-level message adjustment or as a non-strategic interaction-level message adjustment. Using a non-interactive communication task, Experiment 1 showed that people distinguish between messages designed for oneself and messages designed for another person; consistent with strategic message design, messages designed for another person/s were longer (number of words) than those designed for oneself. However, audience size did not affect message length (messages designed for different sized audiences were similar in length). Using an interactive communication task Experiment 2 showed that as group size increased so too did communicative effort (number of words exchanged between interlocutors). Consistent with a non-strategic account, as group members were added more social interaction was necessary to coordinate the group's collective situation model. Experiment 3 validates and extends the production measures used in Experiment 1 and 2 using a comprehension task. Taken together, our results indicate that audience design arises as a non-strategic outcome of social interaction during group discussion.Shane L RogersNicolas FayMurray MayberyPublic Library of Science (PLoS)articleMedicineRScienceQENPLoS ONE, Vol 8, Iss 2, p e57211 (2013)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Medicine
R
Science
Q
spellingShingle Medicine
R
Science
Q
Shane L Rogers
Nicolas Fay
Murray Maybery
Audience design through social interaction during group discussion.
description This paper contrasts two accounts of audience design during multiparty communication: audience design as a strategic individual-level message adjustment or as a non-strategic interaction-level message adjustment. Using a non-interactive communication task, Experiment 1 showed that people distinguish between messages designed for oneself and messages designed for another person; consistent with strategic message design, messages designed for another person/s were longer (number of words) than those designed for oneself. However, audience size did not affect message length (messages designed for different sized audiences were similar in length). Using an interactive communication task Experiment 2 showed that as group size increased so too did communicative effort (number of words exchanged between interlocutors). Consistent with a non-strategic account, as group members were added more social interaction was necessary to coordinate the group's collective situation model. Experiment 3 validates and extends the production measures used in Experiment 1 and 2 using a comprehension task. Taken together, our results indicate that audience design arises as a non-strategic outcome of social interaction during group discussion.
format article
author Shane L Rogers
Nicolas Fay
Murray Maybery
author_facet Shane L Rogers
Nicolas Fay
Murray Maybery
author_sort Shane L Rogers
title Audience design through social interaction during group discussion.
title_short Audience design through social interaction during group discussion.
title_full Audience design through social interaction during group discussion.
title_fullStr Audience design through social interaction during group discussion.
title_full_unstemmed Audience design through social interaction during group discussion.
title_sort audience design through social interaction during group discussion.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
publishDate 2013
url https://doaj.org/article/59ac0bb4f77040b2b71f6bdf9d197811
work_keys_str_mv AT shanelrogers audiencedesignthroughsocialinteractionduringgroupdiscussion
AT nicolasfay audiencedesignthroughsocialinteractionduringgroupdiscussion
AT murraymaybery audiencedesignthroughsocialinteractionduringgroupdiscussion
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