archive for 2007/05


hostile jerks aren’t allowed unless they disemvowel

trolls in communities and how to keep your community civil is the subject of cory doctorow’s article How To Keep Hostile Jerks From Taking Over Your Online Community (what a great title!)

i absolutely LOVE the disemvowelling idea. this means you remove all the vowels from a post when the writer was being a hostile jerk. it nicely side steps the censorship issue, gets the message out to the writer & rest of the community that this behaviour isn’t acceptable & makes it so hard to read – it’s like throwing water on the fire!

cross cultural persuasion

article on how different cultures respond to different forms of persuasion.

employees at 4 locations of citibank participated in research concerning how they decided to handle a request from a colleague. the thought process varied based on their location (usa, hong kong, germany and spain) and illustrates how people working in cross cultural environments need to work differently depending on their audience. the research blurb does not specify if these were f2f or virtual teams but i’m guessing f2f (had it been virtual i think they would mention it).

the research found americans were more concerned with what was in it for them & if they owed the person asking a favor. germans wanted to know if the request conformed to the rules & regulations. the spanish looked at friendship & your connections and the chinese at rank & group affiliation. if you were a project manager of a team that consisted of members in the states, hk, germany & spain, you’d have to work all of these angles. it’s a fantastic illustration for people who are in those situations.

ref:
Morris, M., Podolny, J., & Ariel, S. (2001). Culture, norms, and obligations: Cross-national differences in patterns of interpersonal norms and felt obligations toward coworkers.” In The Practice of Social Influence in Multiple Cultures, edited by W. Wosinska, D. Barrett, R. Cialdini, and J. Reykowski, 97-123. Mahwah, N.J.: Lawrence Erlbaum.

site down time

this sunday the site will be down as my hosting company is moving stuff around.

below is the start time, they’re estimating 5 hours but we all know how that goes…

Sunday midnite PST (ie San Fran)
Sunday 3am EST (ie NYC)
Sunday 8a BST (it is bst now, isn’t it London-ers?)
Sunday 5pm AEST (australian eastern ie Melbourne)

cfp: second life research

call for papers: Learning and Research In Second Life Preconference Workshop. (this is a f2f session in vancouver but will be simulcast in SL)

details from their site:
This workshop aims to improve the understanding of Second Life as a
Learning and Research environment. It will bring 35 researchers
together to collaborate, discuss and workshop diverse topics related
to research and learning in Second Life. We will pursue a full-day
schedule in which participants will discuss their work and interests
on four different topics: learning in Second Life, integrated
learning, the contributions of research to the community and ethical
research methods.

journal: online communities/f2f impacts in japan & korea

Links between Real and Virtual Networks: A Comparative Study of Online Communities in Japan and Korea

abstract:
The present study explores how online communities affect real-world personal relations based on a cross-cultural survey conducted in Japan and Korea. Findings indicate that the gratifications of online communities moderate the effects of online communities on social participation. Online communities are categorized into a real-group-based community and a virtual-network-based community. The membership of real-group-based online community is positively correlated with social bonding gratification and negatively correlated with information- seeking gratification. Japanese users prefer more virtual-network-based online communities, while their Korean counterparts prefer real-group-based online communities. Korean users are more active in online communities and seek a higher level of socializing gratifications, such as social bonding and making new friends, when compared with their Japanese counterparts. These results indicate that in Korea, personal relations via the online community are closely associated with the real-world personal relations, but this is not the case in Japan. This study suggests that the effects of the Internet are culture-specific and that the online community can serve a different function in different cultural environments.

CyberPsychology & Behavior
Apr 2007, Vol. 10, No. 2 : 252 -257

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