Affinity Through Instant Messaging
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Issue Date
2012Author
Grebe, Jason P.
Hall, Jeffrey A.
Publisher
Northwest Communication Association
Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The present manuscript explores affinity seeking, testing, and signaling in initial interactions of
opposite-sex strangers using instant messaging. Sixty dyads (N = 120) interacted for 20 minutes
and participants identified when they showed liking and when they perceived their partner
showing liking in the interaction transcript. Participants also reported overall liking for and the
perception of being liked by their conversation partner on a survey instrument. The results
indicated that participants who perceived more liking in the text and accurately decoded
messages of liking from their partner, believed their conversational partner liked them more.
Participants who perceived more disliking messages in the text liked their conversational
partners less and believed their partner liked them less as well. Six dyadic analyses using
structural equation modeling demonstrated that effects of affinity seeking, testing, and
signaling were moderated by participant sex. For females, sending messages of disliking,
perceiving messages of disliking, and accurately decoding of disliking were associated with
overall liking of their male conversational partner. The implications of interpreting affinity
messages in the formation of online relationships are discussed.
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Citation
Grebe, J. P. and Hall, J.A. (in press). “Affinity In Instant Messaging.” Northwest Journal of
Communication.
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