Authors
Ellen Isaacs, Alan Walendowski, Steve Whittaker, Diane J Schiano, Candace Kamm
Publication date
2002/11/16
Book
Proceedings of the 2002 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work
Pages
11-20
Description
Current perceptions of Instant Messaging (IM) use are based primarily on self-report studies. We logged thousands of (mostly) workplace IM conversations and evaluated their conversational characteristics and functions. Contrary to prior research, we found that the primary use of workplace IM was for complex work discussions. Only 28% of conversations were simple, single-purpose interactions and only 31% were about scheduling or coordination. Moreover, people rarely switched from IM to another medium when the conversation got complex. We found evidence of two distinct styles of use. Heavy IM users and frequent IM partners mainly used it to work together: to discuss a broad range of topics via many fast-paced interactions per day, each with many short turns and much threading and multitasking. Light users and infrequent pairs mainly used IM to coordinate: for scheduling, via fewer conversations per day …
Total citations
200320042005200620072008200920102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202430524852585133382727203626241881112198112
Scholar articles
E Isaacs, A Walendowski, S Whittaker, DJ Schiano… - Proceedings of the 2002 ACM conference on …, 2002