Computer-mediated communication, de-individuation and group decision-making
International Journal of Man-Machine Studies - Computer-supported cooperative work and groupware. Part 1
ACM Transactions on Information Systems (TOIS) - Special issue on social science perspectives on IS
Mobile culture of children and teenagers in Finland
Perpetual contact
Understanding the Psychology of Internet Behaviour: Virtual Worlds, Real Lives
Understanding the Psychology of Internet Behaviour: Virtual Worlds, Real Lives
Love Online: Emotions on the Internet
Love Online: Emotions on the Internet
Toward a more civilized design: studying the effects of computers that apologize
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
In praise of forgiveness: Ways for repairing trust breakdowns in one-off online interactions
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Avatars in social media: Balancing accuracy, playfulness and embodied messages
International Journal of Human-Computer Studies
Professorial collaborations via CMC: Interactional dialectics
Computers in Human Behavior
The effect of video feedback delay on frustration and emotion communication accuracy
Computers in Human Behavior
COST'10 Proceedings of the 2010 international conference on Analysis of Verbal and Nonverbal Communication and Enactment
Emotion understanding and performance during computer-supported collaboration
Computers in Human Behavior
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If emotions are oriented to other people's actions and reactions, then their expression will be affected by available modes of access to interpersonal feedback. This theoretical review paper applies such a relation-alignment perspective to emotions experienced in co-present and remote interpersonal interactions. The role of actual, anticipated, and imagined responses of others in emotion maintenance and adjustment is highlighted. In particular, it is argued that different modes of interpersonal contact afford different styles of emotion presentation, and encourage distinctive varieties of emotional creativity. Thus, although emotion may take different forms in social arrangements distributed through a virtual world, this need not result in more limited forms of interpersonal contact.