`Making Moosic': The Development of Personal Relationships on Line and a Comparison to their Off-Line Counterparts
Contenu
Titre
`Making Moosic': The Development of Personal Relationships on Line and a Comparison to their Off-Line Counterparts
Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
Créateur
Malcolm R. Parks
Lynne D. Roberts
Sujet
Development
computer-mediated communication
friendship
Résumé
Despite the rapid development of the Internet over the past decade and the associated media hyperbole about cyberspace relationships, there is a paucity of systematic research examining the prevalence, type and development of personal relationships in on-line settings. This research examines relational topography in real-time text-based virtual environments known as MOOs (Multi-User Dimensions, Object Oriented). Current users of MOOs (235) completed a survey on MOO relationships, with 155 also completing a survey on offline relationships. Almost all survey respondents (93.6%) had formed ongoing personal relationships on MOOs. The most commonly reported types of relationships were close friendships, friendships and romances. The majority of relationships formed (83.6%) was with members of the opposite sex. Levels of relational development (interdependence, depth, breadth, code change, commitment, predictability/understanding, network convergence) were typically moderate to high. Most relationships had migrated to other virtual environments, and a third had resulted in face-to-face meetings. On average, MOO relationships were found to be more developed than newsgroup relationships, but less developed than off-line relationships. It was concluded that MOOs provide an inherently social and powerful context for the formation of personal relationships, many of which will transfer to other settings.
volume
15
numéro
4
pages
517-537
Date
08/01/1998
Titre abrégé
Journal of Social and Personal Relationships
`Making Moosic'
Langue
en
doi
10.1177/0265407598154005
issn
0265-4075, 1460-3608