Group awareness and self-presentation in computer-supported information exchange |
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Authors: | Joachim Kimmerle Ulrike Cress |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Applied Cognitive Psychology and Media Psychology, University of Tuebingen, Konrad-Adenauer-Str. 40, 72072 Tuebingen, Germany;(2) Knowledge Media Research Center, Konrad-Adenauer-Str. 40, 72072 Tuebingen, Germany |
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Abstract: | A common challenge in many situations of computer-supported collaborative learning is increasing the willingness of those
involved to share their knowledge with other group members. As a prototypical situation of computer-supported information
exchange, a shared-database setting was chosen for the current study. This information-exchange situation represented a social
dilemma: while the contribution of information to a shared database induced costs and provided no benefit for the individual,
the entire group suffered when all members decided to withhold information. In order to alleviate the information-exchange
dilemma, a group-awareness tool was employed. It was hypothesized that participants would use group awareness for self-presentational
purposes. For the examination of this assumption, the personality variable ‘protective self-presentation’ (PSP) was measured.
An interaction effect of group awareness and PSP was found: when an awareness tool provided information concerning the contribution
behavior of each individual, this tool was used as a self-presentation opportunity. In order to understand this effect in
more detail, single items of the PSP-scale were analyzed. |
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Keywords: | Group awareness Self-presentation Information-exchange dilemma |
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