6533b831fe1ef96bd1298f3f

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Conflict management in groups that work in two different communication contexts: Face-to-face and computer-mediated communication

Ana ZornozaPilar RipollJosé M. Peiró

subject

Social Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesApplied psychology050801 communication & media studiesTask (project management)Face-to-faceInterpersonal relationship0508 media and communications0502 economics and businessConflict resolutionConflict managementQuality (business)Computer-mediated communicationFunction (engineering)PsychologySocial psychology050203 business & managementApplied Psychologymedia_common

description

The aim of this study is to test the differences in quality and frequency of conflict management behavior as a function of the interaction between task and communication medium, and practice time in continuing groups that work over two different media: computer mediated communication (CMC) and face to face communication (FTF). Conflict management behavior is studied through observed behavior and categorized by experts. Two conflict management behavior categories are differentiated: positive and negative conflict management behavior. A laboratory experiment was carried out comparing 12 groups of 4 members each, working over two communication media (6 groups FTF and 6 groups over CMC). Groups performed three types of tasks (idea-generation tasks, intellective tasks, and mixed-motive tasks) during weekly sessions over a 2-month period. Results obtained for the idea-generation task show that negative conflict management is significantly higher in CMC than in FTF. For the groups working on intellective tasks, positive conflict management is significantly higher in FTF than in CMC. Conversely, negative conflict management is significantly higher in CMC than in FTF. No significant differences appear in positive or in negative conflict management on the mixed-motive task. The effect of time on conflict management behaviors in both communication media, and for intellective tasks, does not follow the hypothesized direction. In fact, in CMC, positive conflict management decreases over time, and there are no significant differences in FTF. Implications of these results for future research and practice are discussed.

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