Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
351412 Computers in Human Behavior 2012 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

This study examined whether evaluations (agreements, disagreements), knowledge content (new ideas, justifications), or social cues (SCs) in recent messages affected a current message’s positive or negative SC during asynchronous, online discussions. Using statistical discourse analysis, we modeled 894 messages by 183 participants on 60 high school mathematics topics (typically eight people posted per topic) on a mathematics problem solving website not connected to any class or school. Results showed that recent agreements increased the likelihood of positive SC, whereas justifications reduced it. Disagreements increased the likelihood of negative SC, whereas new ideas reduced it. Meanwhile, recent positive or negative SCs did not affect the likelihood of a subsequent SC. Together, these results suggest that judicious use of positive SCs rather than negative SCs during disagreements can help students both construct knowledge and maintain social relationships.

► Characteristics of recent messages influence social cues (SCs) in online discussions. ► Agreements increased positive SCs, while disagreements increased negative SCs. ► New ideas reduced negative SCs, while justifications reduced positive SCs. ► SCs did not affect the likelihood of a subsequent SC.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science Applications
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