TY - JOUR
T1 - Do New Romantic Couples Use More Similar Language over Time? Evidence from Intensive Longitudinal Text Messages
AU - Brinberg, Miriam
AU - Ram, Nilam
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of International Communication Association. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: [email protected].
PY - 2021/6/1
Y1 - 2021/6/1
N2 - The digital text traces left by computer-mediated communication (CMC) provide a new opportunity to test theories of relational processes that were originally developed through observation of face-to-face interactions. Communication accommodation theory, for example, suggests that conversation partners' verbal (and non-verbal) behaviors become more similar as relationships develop. Using a corpus of 1+ million text messages that 41 college-age romantic couples sent to each other during their first year of dating, this study examines how linguistic alignment of new romantic couples' CMC changes during relationship formation. Results from nonlinear growth models indicate that three aspects of daily linguistic alignment (syntactic - language style matching, semantic - latent semantic analysis, overall - cosine similarity) all exhibit exponential growth to an asymptote as romantic relationships form. Beyond providing empirical support that communication accommodation theory also applies in romantic partners' CMC, this study demonstrates how relational processes can be examined using digital trace data.
AB - The digital text traces left by computer-mediated communication (CMC) provide a new opportunity to test theories of relational processes that were originally developed through observation of face-to-face interactions. Communication accommodation theory, for example, suggests that conversation partners' verbal (and non-verbal) behaviors become more similar as relationships develop. Using a corpus of 1+ million text messages that 41 college-age romantic couples sent to each other during their first year of dating, this study examines how linguistic alignment of new romantic couples' CMC changes during relationship formation. Results from nonlinear growth models indicate that three aspects of daily linguistic alignment (syntactic - language style matching, semantic - latent semantic analysis, overall - cosine similarity) all exhibit exponential growth to an asymptote as romantic relationships form. Beyond providing empirical support that communication accommodation theory also applies in romantic partners' CMC, this study demonstrates how relational processes can be examined using digital trace data.
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U2 - 10.1093/joc/jqab012
DO - 10.1093/joc/jqab012
M3 - Article
C2 - 34335083
AN - SCOPUS:85122796392
SN - 0021-9916
VL - 71
SP - 454
EP - 477
JO - Journal of Communication
JF - Journal of Communication
IS - 3
ER -