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Media Compensation Theory: A Darwinian Perspective on Adaptation to Electronic Communication and Collaboration

In: Evolutionary Psychology in the Business Sciences

Author

Listed:
  • Donald A. Hantula

    (Temple University)

  • Ned Kock

    (Texas A&M International University)

  • John P. D’Arcy

    (University of Notre Dame)

  • Darleen M. DeRosa

    (OnPoint Consulting)

Abstract

This chapter proceeds from the paradox that virtual work, teams, and collaboration are generally successful, sometimes even outperforming face-to-face collaborative work efforts in spite of much theory that predicts the opposite. We review theories that have previously been used to explain behavior toward electronic communication media, highlighting a theoretical gap, which is partially filled with a new Darwinian perspective called media compensation theory. Eight theoretical principles are discussed – media naturalness, innate schema similarity, learned schema variety, evolutionary task relevance, compensatory adaptation, media humanness, cue removal, and speech imperative. Those principles are then used as a basis for a discussion of the impact that different media have on virtual collaboration, work and teams. Empirical evidence in connection with the theoretical framework is described. In particular, empirical studies of idea generation, problem solving, and business process redesign tasks are reviewed. The evidence reviewed provides empirical support for the theoretical framework proposed, and a future research agenda on virtual teams from a media naturalness perspective is proposed, especially in terms of temporal processes, adaptation, trust and cheater detection.

Suggested Citation

  • Donald A. Hantula & Ned Kock & John P. D’Arcy & Darleen M. DeRosa, 2011. "Media Compensation Theory: A Darwinian Perspective on Adaptation to Electronic Communication and Collaboration," Springer Books, in: Gad Saad (ed.), Evolutionary Psychology in the Business Sciences, pages 339-363, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-540-92784-6_13
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-540-92784-6_13
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    Cited by:

    1. Nida Kamal & Sajeela Rabbani & Hina Samdani & Sobia Shujaat & Mubashir Ahmad, 2020. "Social Media Usage, Overload and Exhaustion: A Performance Perspective," International Review of Management and Marketing, Econjournals, vol. 10(5), pages 19-26.
    2. A. J. Burns & Tom L. Roberts & Clay Posey & Paul Benjamin Lowry, 2019. "The Adaptive Roles of Positive and Negative Emotions in Organizational Insiders’ Security-Based Precaution Taking," Information Systems Research, INFORMS, vol. 30(4), pages 1228-1247, December.
    3. Ray Tak-yin Hui & Kuok Kei Law & Sara Choi-Ping Lau, 2021. "Online or offline? Coaching media as mediator of the relationship between coaching style and employee work-related outcomes," Australian Journal of Management, Australian School of Business, vol. 46(2), pages 326-345, May.
    4. Stroh, Tim & Mention, Anne-Laure & Duff, Cameron, 2023. "The impact of evolved psychological mechanisms on innovation and adoption: A systematic literature review," Technovation, Elsevier, vol. 125(C).

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