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To be or not to be trusted: The influence of media richness on defection and deception
Authors:Kevin W Rockmann  Gregory B Northcraft
Institution:1. George Mason University, School of Management, 217 Enterprise Hall, MSN 5F5, Fairfax, VA 22030, USA;2. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 350 Wohlers Hall, 1206 S. Sixth Street, Champaign, IL 61820, USA
Abstract:When business transactions take place between strangers, individuals rely on the cues during communication to determine whether they can trust others’ intentions. How that process occurs in the context of computer-mediated, video-mediated, and face-to-face interactions is still somewhat unknown. We examine how media richness influences both affective-based and cognitive-based trust in the context of two studies with two different social dilemma scenarios. Further, we explore how these two types of trust influence not only non-cooperative behavior (defection) but also lying (deception). Results from the first study suggest cognitive-based trust mediates the relationship between media richness and defection, while results from both studies suggest that affective-based trust mediates the relationship between media richness and deception. Video-mediated communication solves some, but not all, of the problems inherent when interacting via communication technology.
Keywords:Media richness  Cooperation  Deception  Trust  Social dilemma  Computer-mediated communication  Virtual team
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