[Air-l] cmc and ftf interaction (Intern)

richard-seyler.ling at telenor.com richard-seyler.ling at telenor.com
Tue Aug 23 16:25:12 PDT 2005


As I recall, Steve Duck had some stuff on this.

Rich L. 

 -----Original Message-----
From: 	air-l-aoir.org-bounces at listserv.aoir.org [mailto:air-l-aoir.org-bounces at listserv.aoir.org]  On Behalf Of Stephanie Kent
Sent:	Tuesday, 23 August, 2005 08:45 AM
To:	air-l-aoir.org at listserv.aoir.org
Subject:	[Air-l] cmc and ftf interaction

Many moons ago, when I first joined this list (2002), I asked for  
resources on small group dynamics online.  That was my way into an  
interest on the interaction between folks who interact BOTH online and  
face-to-face.  I promised to provide the bibliography I put together,  
and am finally doing so.  Does anyone have additional or more recent  
sources that they might recommend?

Andrejevic, M.  (2002).  The work of being watched:  Interactive media  
and the exploitation of self-disclosure.  Critical Studies in Mass  
Communication, 19(2).

Becker, H.S. (1958).  Problems of Inference and Proof in Participant  
Observation.  American Sociological Review, 23(6), 652-659.

Bennis, W.G. & Shepard, H.A. (1978).  A theory of group development.   
In L. Bradford, Group Development, 2nd Ed., Revised, (13-35).  San  
Francisco:  Jossey-Bass/Pfieffer.

Burkhalter, B. (2000).  Reading race online: discovering racial  
identity in Usenet discussions.  In M.A. Smith & P. Kollack (Eds.),  
Communities in Cyberspace.  London:  Routledge.

Feng, H. (2002, November).  The fragrance of Chinese communication  
atmosphere.  Paper presented at the annual convention of the National  
Communication Association, New Orleans, LA.

Flaherty, L.M., Pearce, K.J., & Rubin, R.B. (1998).  Internet and  
face-to-face communication:  Not functional alternatives.   
Communication Quarterly, 46(3), 250-268.

Guterl, F.  (2002, November 11).  What Freud Got Right.  Newsweek,  
50-51.

Hall, R.  (1999).  The organization and development of discursive  
practices for 'having a theory.'  Discourse Processes, 27(2), 187-218.

Holt, R. & Chang, H.  (2002, November).  Bao (Reciprocity):  The  
give-and-take of appropriate communication. Paper presented at the  
annual convention of the National Communication Association, New  
Orleans, LA.

Horrigan, J.B. (2001, October 31). Online communities:  Networks that  
nurture long-distance relationships and local ties.  A report from the  
Pew Internet & American Life Project.  Retriieved November 25, 2002  
from http://www.pewinternet.org/reports/pdfs/PIP_Communities_Report.pdf

Jia, W. (1999).  From Kaihui to Daihui:  The transformation of Chinese  
civic discourse.  In R. Kluver and J.H. Powers (Eds.), Civic discourse,  
civil society, and Chinese communities, p. 67-76.  Stamford, CT:  Ablex  
Publishing Corporation.

Koschmann, T. (1999).  The edge of many circles:  Making meaning of  
meaning making.  Discourse Processes, 27(2), 103-117.

Layng, J.M.  (2002, November).  Questions & answers:  Computer-mediated  
communication in action. Paper presented at the annual convention of  
the National Communication Association, New Orleans, LA.

Leeds-Hurwitz, W. (1993).  Semiotics and Communication.  Hillsdale, NJ:  
  Lawrence Erlbaum.

Lindlof, T.R. (1995).  Sources of the interpretive paradigm.   
Qualitative Research Methods.  Thousand Oaks, CA:  Sage.

Livingston, I. (1997).  Indiscretions:  Of body, gender, technology.   
In J. Terry & M. Calvert (Eds.), Processed lives:  Gender and  
technology in everyday life (pp. 95-102).  London:  Routledge.

Ma, R. (1996).  Computer-mediated conversations as a new dimension of  
intercultural communication between East Asian and North American  
college students.  In Herring, S.C. Computer-Mediated Communication:   
Linguistic, social and cross-cultural perspectives (173-185.   
Philadelphia:  John Benjamins Publishing Company.

Ma, R.  (2002, November).  Guanxi (Interrleation):  The bridge of  
effective communication. Paper presented at the annual convention of  
the National Communication Association, New Orleans, LA.

Millen, D.R. & Fontaine, M.A. (2002).  Understanding the individual,  
community and organizational benefits of work-based communities.   
Retrieved on November 24, 2002 from the IBM Watson Research Center at  
http://domino.watson.ibm.com/cambridge/research.nsf/pages/papers.html? 
Open&count=500

Millen, D.R. & Muller, M.J. (2001).  Computer-supported communities of  
practice.  Position paper for ECSCW Workshop on Community Knowledge.   
Retrieved November 24, 2002 from the IBM Watson Research Center at  
http://domino.watson.ibm.com/cambridge/research.nsf/pages/papers.html? 
Open&count=500

Mitra, A. & Schwartz, R.L. (2001, October).  From cyber space to  
cybernetic space:  Rethinking the relationship between real and virtual  
spaces.  Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication 7(1).  Retrieved  
November 24, 2002 from http://www.ascusc.org/jcmc/

Oravec, J.A. (2002, April).  Bookmarking the world:  Weblog  
applications in education.  Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy,  
45(7), 616-621.

Oravec, J.A. (2003).  Weblogs as an emerging genre in higher education.  
  Journal of C C Computing in Higher Education, 14 (2), 21-44.

Palincsar, A.S. (1999).  Applying the sociocultural lens to the work of  
a transition community.  Discourse Processes, 27(2), 161-171.

Reddy, W.B. (1994).  Intervention skills:  Process consultation for  
small groups and teams.  San Diego, CA:  Pfeiffer & Company.

Rheingold, H. (1993).  The virtual community:  Homesteading on the  
electronic frontier.  Retrieved November 25, 2002 from  
http://www.well.com/user/hlr/vcbook/vcbookintro/html

Rioch, Margaret J. (1975).  The work of Wilfred Bion on groups.  In  
A.D. Colman & W.H. Bexton (Eds.), Group Relations Reader 1, (21-33).   
Springfield, VA:  Goetz Printing.

Scott, C.R., Quinn, L., Timmerman, C.E., & Garrett, D.M. (1998).   
Ironic uses of group communication technology:  Evidence from meeting  
transcripts and interviews with group decision support system users.   
Communication Quarterly, 46(3), 353-374.

Suler, J. (2000).  Extending a work group into cyberspace.  In The  
Psychology of Cyberspace (orig. pub. 1996), retrieved November 24, 2002  
from http//www.rider.edu/users/suler/psycyber/extendgrp.html

Wakeford, N. (1997).  Networking women and GRRLS with I/CT. In J. Terry  
& M. Calvert (Eds.), Processed lives:  Gender and technology in  
everyday life (pp. 51-66).  London:  Routledge.

Walther, J.B. (1992).  Interpersonal effects in computer-mediated  
interaction:  A relational perspective.  Communication Research, 19(1),  
52-90.

Walther, J.B. (1996).  Impersonal, interpersonal, and hyperpersonal  
interaction.  Communication Research, 23(1), 3-43.

Weber, R.C.  (1982).  "The group:  a cycle from birth to death.  In L.  
Porter & B. Mohr (Eds.), Reading Book for Human Relations Training, 7th  
Edition, (68-71).

Weinberg, H. (2002, March).  Community Unconscious on the Internet.   
Journal of Group Analysis.  Retrieved November 20, 2002, from  
http://www.groupintervisual.net/hosting/ga-special-issue/

Wells, L., Jr. (1985).  The group-as-a-whole perspective and its  
theoretical roots.  In Colman, A.D. & Geller, M.H. (Eds.), Group  
Relations Reader 2, (109-126). Springfield, VA:  Goetz Printing.



steph
http://www.reflexivity.us

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