Go Back   I-Mockery Forum > I-Mockery Discussion Forums > General Blabber
FAQ Members List Calendar Today's Posts

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Brandon Brandon is offline
The Center Square
Brandon's Avatar
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Migrant worker
Brandon is probably a spambot
Old May 10th, 2004, 05:27 PM        The Pitfalls of E-mail
Not exactly groundbreaking information, but worth a read.

http://www.psychologytoday.com/htdoc...303-000001.asp

The Pitfalls of E-mail

by Marina Krakovsky

We assume that the opportunity to edit our written words means we put our best foot forward, but a recent study suggests that communicating via e-mail alone can doom a relationship.

Janice Nadler, a social psychologist and Northwestern University law professor, paired Northwestern law students with those from Duke University and asked each pair to agree on the purchase of a car. Researchers instructed each team to bargain entirely through e-mail, but half the subjects were secretly told to precede the negotiation with a brief getting-to-know-you chat on the phone. The results were dramatic: Negotiators who first chatted by phone were more than four times likelier to reach an agreement than those who used only e-mail. In the study, which will appear in the Harvard Negotiation Law Review, subjects who never spoke were not only more likely to hit an impasse but they often felt resentful and angry about the negotiation.

While all sorts of online exchanges can be misunderstood, social scientists say that faceless strangers are especially likely to run into problems. “Through that initial phone call, people become real,” says Susan Barnes, a professor of communication at Rochester Institute of Technology in New York. Simply foregoing common pleasantries can make a message come across as rude—especially if communicators don’t know each other. A rushed e-mail may give the impression that the exchange is unimportant. And, because first impressions set the tone for subsequent interaction, Barnes says, the exchange can quickly go downhill.

Nadler says the missing element in electronic communication is rapport, that in-sync state that’s easier to establish in person or by phone. Facial expressions, gestures, tone of voice—all these social cues are missing in e-mail (and smiley-face “emoticons” can do only so much to replace them). But because messages travel almost instantly, people act as if they’re in a face-to-face conversation, says David Falcone, a psychology professor at La Salle University in Philadelphia. Because of this illusion of proximity, we’re duped into thinking we can communicate about touchy subjects, such as disagreements or criticisms, and that the tone of our writing will be perceived correctly. Furthermore, says Nadler, just because we can send a message anytime doesn’t mean someone is there to receive it. Yet people often fear a delayed reply is a potential blow-off.

And when we feel slighted, we are more apt to throw a fit via e-mail than we would by phone. “The anonymity of e-mail leads to rudeness,” says Barnes, adding we may not feel accountable, especially if we’ve never actually spoken to the other person. Even if we mean well, the lack of second-by-second feedback, by which we constantly adjust our words in conversation, can cause us to go on blithely composing messages that will rub the recipient the wrong way. John Suler, a psychologist at New Jersey’s Rider University who specializes in cyberspace behavior, believes that talking first on the phone might set expectations at an appropriate level—an effect that then carries over into the e-mail relationship.

The less we know someone, the more likely we are to engage in what therapists call transference, the tendency to project our desires or fears onto another person. Without social cues, says Falcone, these tendencies can run wild, causing us to interpret messages in ways that are “overly self-affirming and, potentially, extremely inaccurate.” Suler adds that in the negotiation study, the initial phone call may have served as a “transference antidote,” making the partners more real to each other.
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Terra Terra is offline
MAMA MIA!
Terra's Avatar
Join Date: Feb 2004
Terra is probably a spambot
Old May 10th, 2004, 08:35 PM       
...and e-sex is shitty too.
__________________
Oh fuck it
Reply With Quote
  #3  
sports sports is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Since I'm a Ghost...
sports is probably a spambot
Old May 10th, 2004, 09:02 PM       
Blah....
Reply With Quote
  #4  
Comrade Rocket Comrade Rocket is offline
Senior Member
Comrade Rocket's Avatar
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: In that place where i didnt know where we were before
Comrade Rocket is probably a spambot
Old May 11th, 2004, 01:48 PM       
A girl broke up with me in an e-mail once. shes a bitch

but its okay, i have a picture of her boobs
__________________
Reply With Quote
  #5  
Shostie Shostie is offline
Member
 
Join Date: May 2004
Location: The coast of Mississippi.
Shostie is probably a spambot
Old May 12th, 2004, 01:04 PM       
Quote:
but its okay, i have a picture of her boobs
It's never a breakup without a little blackmail.
__________________
"I wish God were alive to see this."

-Homer Simpson

www.blackout.com
Reply With Quote
  #6  
The Retro Kat The Retro Kat is offline
Mocker
The Retro Kat's Avatar
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: MYANUS.
The Retro Kat is probably a spambot
Old May 12th, 2004, 05:09 PM       
SHOSTIE U SUCK N STUFF SO STOP SUKKING OR JUST LEAVE CUZ U SUCK BAD.
__________________
Gas and masturbation are highly unlikely to be connected with each other. Have you tried to stop masturbating? Has the gas subsided as a result? Perhaps you could try the same experiment by increasing the times you masturbate daily. Do you notice that the gas is increasing?
Reply With Quote
Reply



Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

   


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:16 AM.


© 2008 I-Mockery.com
Powered by: vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.