Title
Do You Read Me? Perspective Making and Perspective Taking in Chat Communities
Abstract
We present a study of synchronous, text-based chat communications between customers and customer service representatives (CSRs), and examine the process of coordinating perspectives through perspective making and perspective taking to build shared understanding of context. Using a cultural hermeneutic lens and its four contextual relations, we studied more than 4400 chat messages generated during a two-year period. Successful coordination of perspectives occurred in eighty percent of the exchanges, in spite of conversational incoherence introduced by the chat technology. When coordination of perspectives between customers and CSRs failed, it was due to one or a combination of three factors: the customer's inability to successfully communicate intention, lack of customer/CSR shared understanding of reference about what was being discussed, and/or misinterpretation of each other's identities. This suggests that technology solutions to reduce conversational incoherence may not be of as much value as improving how people articulate intention and create shared reference. Finally, we demonstrate that contextual relations in cultural hermeneutics offer an analytic device and vocabulary to discern exactly what is missing when technology-mediated communication breaks down.
Year
Venue
Keywords
2007
JOURNAL OF THE ASSOCIATION FOR INFORMATION SYSTEMS
online chat,computer mediated communication ( CMC),cultural hermeneutics,textual analysis,perspective making,perspective taking
Field
DocType
Volume
Perspective-taking,Computer science,Multimedia,Online chat
Journal
8
Issue
ISSN
Citations 
1
1536-9323
16
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.88
13
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Michael H. Dickey1524.93
Gary Burnett2434.00
Katherine M. Chudoba339823.17
Michelle Kazmer421225.25