DocumentCode :
3095948
Title :
Trust and deception in mediated communication
Author :
Burgoon, Judee K. ; Stoner, Gates Matthew ; Bonito, Joseph A. ; Dunbar, Norah E.
Author_Institution :
Center for the Manage. of Inf., Arizona Univ., Tucson, AZ, USA
fYear :
2003
fDate :
6-9 Jan. 2003
Abstract :
Guided by interpersonal deception theory and the principle of interactivity, this investigation examined whether communication modalities differentially affect the extent to which group members develop trust or are vulnerable to manipulation and deceit, based on the degree of interactivity the modalities afford. According to the principle of interactivity, involvement and mutuality should increase as one move from text to audio and audiovisual (AV) modalities, to face-to-face (FtF) communication. Under nondeceptive circumstances, greater interactivity should elicit corresponding increases in trust and credibility; under deceptive circumstances, it should produce greater truth biases and inaccurate detection of deceit. This effect should be partly mitigated in text and audio modalities due to the presence of diagnostic deception indicators Pairs were assigned to a truthful or deceptive condition in one of three mediated conditions, or in a face-to-face condition. In the deceptive condition, one member of each pair was enlisted to deceive during the interaction. Following discussion, participants rated their communicative behavior and the credibility of the truthful or deceptive actor. Truth bias and accuracy in judging deceptive information was calculated. Results are compared to previous findings from face-to-face deception. Implications for collaborative technologies are advanced.
Keywords :
groupware; security of data; audio modalities; audiovisual modalities; collaborative technologies; communication modalities; communicative behavior; deceptive circumstances; deceptive information; diagnostic deception indicators pairs; face-to-face communication; face-to-face condition; face-to-face deception; interactivity principle; interpersonal deception theory; mediated communication; text modalities; Collaboration; Collaborative work; Face detection; Information management; Information resources; Medical diagnostic imaging; Psychology; Teamwork;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
System Sciences, 2003. Proceedings of the 36th Annual Hawaii International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-1874-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/HICSS.2003.1173792
Filename :
1173792
Link To Document :
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