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Remote Communication and Technology Diffusion

Communication Dimensions, : 53--70, 2001.
Authors: Gloria Mark and Steven Poltrock and Danyel Fisher
URL: /brokenurl#ieeexplore.ieee.org/iel5/7661/20931/00971550.pdf?arnumber=971550
Description: March 2008
Tags: Adoption CSCW Conferencing Data Diffusion Networks Social Studies Technology and
Abstract: The rise of virtual collocation in distributed organizations may lead to new patterns of technology adoption. Whereas previous studies of technology diffusion (e.g. Rogers 1995) point the role of mass media and interpersonal communication in adoption, we find that collaborating partners who rarely see one another are important contributors to the diffusion of virtual collaboration technologies. We studied a large distributed organization to discover how and why a data conferencing technology was disseminated rapidly in a relatively short-time. We interpret our results to show that the technology has on an on-demand basis rather than through formal channels that the company had established. We connect this growth in usage with Rogers (1995) theories about the diffusion of innovations and the social network in place at this organization.
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@article{Mar-01,
title = {Remote Communication and Technology Diffusion},
author = {Gloria Mark and Steven Poltrock and Danyel Fisher},
journal = {Communication Dimensions},
pages = {53--70},
url = {ieeexplore.ieee.org/iel5/7661/20931/00971550.pdf?arnumber=971550},
year = {2001},
description = {March 2008},
abstract = {The rise of virtual collocation in distributed organizations may lead to new patterns of technology adoption. Whereas previous studies of technology diffusion (e.g. Rogers 1995) point the role of mass media and interpersonal communication in adoption, we find that collaborating partners who rarely see one another are important contributors to the diffusion of virtual collaboration technologies. We studied a large distributed organization to discover how and why a data conferencing technology was disseminated rapidly in a relatively short-time. We interpret our results to show that the technology has on an on-demand basis rather than through formal channels that the company had established. We connect this growth in usage with Rogers (1995) theories about the diffusion of innovations and the social network in place at this organization.},
date-added = {2007-06-11 17:22:07 +0200}, date-modified = {2007-06-11 17:22:06 +0200}, rating = {0}, uri = {papers://C3B117CD-23C4-4854-9426-AC96AFB113DA/Paper/p139},
keywords = {Adoption CSCW Conferencing Data Diffusion Networks Social Studies Technology and }
}