Publication | Closed Access
Does <i>Who</i> Matter?
40
Citations
52
References
2019
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringMobile Maintenance ExpectationSocial PsychologySocial InfluenceProblematic Smartphone UseCommunicationPersonhoodSocial SciencesPsychologyGender IdentityPersonal RelationshipComputer-mediated CommunicationSocial IdentityUser ExperienceApplied Social PsychologySocial Identity TheorySocial ContactsInterruption ContextInterpersonal CommunicationSocial ComputingHuman Interaction
This study examines the characteristics of mobile instant-messaging users' relationships with their social contacts and the effects of both relationship and interruption context on four measures of receptivity: Attentiveness, Responsiveness, Interruptibility, and Opportuneness. Overall, interruption context overshadows relationship characteristics as predictors of all four of these facets of receptivity; this overshadowing was most acute for Interruptibility and Opportuneness, but existed for all factors. In addition, while Mobile Maintenance Expectation and Activity Engagement were negatively correlated with all receptivity measures, each such measure had its own set of predictors, highlighting the conceptual differences among the measures. Finally, delving more deeply into potential relationship effects, we found that a single, simple closeness question was as effective at predicting receptivity as the 12-item Unidimensional Relationship Closeness Scale.
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