Feedback on collaborative skills in remote studio design

The study examines how feedback affects remote collaborative brainstorming and product design in a studio setting. 10 teams of 4 students at the Parsons School of Design met remotely via a chatroom interface for three 30-minute sessions to design a T-shirt. Team members who proposed ideas were rated as better collaborators, and team members who critiqued ideas without offering alternatives were rated as poor collaborators. This was also reflected in team members' word use, as measured by Pennebaker & Francis' linguistic inquiry and word count too; for example, team members who used more affect words were rated as poorer collaborators. A case study of one team suggests that the ideas proposed by team members rated as the best collaborators may be most likely to survive. Peer feedback can affect remote studio design discussion in ways comparable to what is found in other settings, despite task differences

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Epilogue: Language at the heart of social psychology

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Virtual environments for creative work in collaborative music-making