Evaluating video as a technology for informal communication

Collaborations in organizations thrive on communication that is informal because informal communication is frequent, interactive, and expressive. Informal communication is crucial for the coordination of work, learning an organization's culture, the perpetuation of the social relations that underlie collaboration, and, in general, any situation that requires communication to resolve ambiguity. Informal communication is traditionally mediated by physical proximity, but physical proximity cannot mediate in geographically distributed organizations. The research described here evaluates the adequacy of a version of a desktop video/audio conferencing system for supporting informal communication in a research and development laboratory. The evaluation took place during a trial in which the system was used by summer employees and their supervisor-mentors. While the system was used frequently, the most common uses and users' assessments suggest that it was used more like a telephone or electronic mail than like physically mediated face-to-face communication. However, some features of its use transcended traditional media and allowed users to gain awareness of their work environment. The paper concludes with a discussion of requirements for successful technology to support informal communication.

[1]  S. C. Johnson Hierarchical clustering schemes , 1967, Psychometrika.

[2]  Stewart L. Tubbs,et al.  Handbook of Organizational Communication. , 1988 .

[3]  J. Kruskal Multidimensional scaling by optimizing goodness of fit to a nonmetric hypothesis , 1964 .

[4]  R. W. Root,et al.  Informal Communication in Organizations: Form, Function, and Technology , 1990 .

[5]  M. Rockoff,et al.  The Social Implications of Health Care Communication Systems , 1975, IEEE Trans. Commun..

[6]  Christian Heath,et al.  Disembodied conduct: communication through video in a multi-media office environment , 1991, CHI.

[7]  Robert W. Root,et al.  Design of a multi-media vehicle for social browsing , 1988, CSCW '88.

[8]  Alan Borning,et al.  Two approaches to casual interaction over computer and video networks , 1991, CHI.

[9]  L. M. Gomez,et al.  Tools to support conversational multimedia , 1991, IEEE Global Telecommunications Conference GLOBECOM '91: Countdown to the New Millennium. Conference Record.

[10]  Sara Kiesler,et al.  Social psychological aspects of computer-mediated communication , 1984 .

[11]  Robert E. Kraut,et al.  The VideoWindow system in informal communication , 1990, CSCW '90.

[12]  R. Shepard The analysis of proximities: Multidimensional scaling with an unknown distance function. II , 1962 .

[13]  S. Bulick,et al.  The US West Advanced Technologies prototype multimedia communication system , 1989, IEEE Global Telecommunications Conference, 1989, and Exhibition. 'Communications Technology for the 1990s and Beyond.

[14]  M. Rockoff An Overview of Some Technological/Health-Care System Implications of Seven Exploratory Broad-Band Communication Experiments , 1975, IEEE Trans. Commun..

[15]  Richard L. Daft,et al.  Organizational information requirements, media richness and structural design , 1986 .

[16]  Steven Altman,et al.  Organizational Behavior: Theory and Practice , 1991 .

[17]  R. Shepard The analysis of proximities: Multidimensional scaling with an unknown distance function. I. , 1962 .

[18]  John Short,et al.  The social psychology of telecommunications , 1976 .

[19]  M. Abel Experiences in an exploratory distributed organization , 1990 .

[20]  Peter R. Monge,et al.  The Dynamics of Organizational Proximity , 1985 .

[21]  Sara A. Bly,et al.  The Portland Experience: A Report on a Distributed Research Group , 1991, Int. J. Man Mach. Stud..

[22]  M. Knapp,et al.  Social intercourse: From greeting to goodbye , 1978 .

[23]  R. Daft,et al.  Information Richness. A New Approach to Managerial Behavior and Organization Design , 1983 .

[24]  George O. Goodman,et al.  Communication and collaboration: facilitating cooperative work through communication , 1987 .

[25]  Arthur P. Molella,et al.  The Social Impact of the Telephone , 1978 .