Hyperpresence: Difference between revisions
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===Discussion=== | ===Discussion=== | ||
Hyperpresence describes the development of an accelerated form of social, psychological and cognitive availability due to the rise of interactive and distance-based media technologies. These technologies allow for | |||
The definition of social presence "suggests that although mediated social presence should be measured against the yardstick of face-to-face communication between two human beings, it may be possible to develop a medium in which one feels greater "access to the intelligence, intentions, and sensory impressions of another" than is possible in the most intimate, face-to-face communication. One aspect of what might be called hyperpresence may be possible in the social presence domain as well"<ref>http://jcmc.indiana.edu/vol3/issue2/biocca2.html (Biocca, forthcoming)</ref>. | |||
"The problem for defining this kind of presence experience according to terms of tele-presence is the difficulty to talk about physical distances, about things ‘far away’ and thus far-present: tele-present. More than this we have to deal with another kind of spatiality making these distances even obsolete and allowing presence to take place in a higher, more spiritual space".<ref>[http://www.temple.edu/ispr/prev_conferences/proceedings/2006/P2006proceedings.pdf Söffner, Jan. University of Cologne, Germany. What Production of Presence and Mimesis have in Common. Presence 2006.]</ref> | |||
==References== | |||
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[[Category:Book Pages]] | [[Category:Book Pages]] | ||
[[Category:Marked for Editing]] | [[Category:Marked for Editing]] | ||
Revision as of 05:07, 16 May 2011
Discussion
Hyperpresence describes the development of an accelerated form of social, psychological and cognitive availability due to the rise of interactive and distance-based media technologies. These technologies allow for
The definition of social presence "suggests that although mediated social presence should be measured against the yardstick of face-to-face communication between two human beings, it may be possible to develop a medium in which one feels greater "access to the intelligence, intentions, and sensory impressions of another" than is possible in the most intimate, face-to-face communication. One aspect of what might be called hyperpresence may be possible in the social presence domain as well"[1].
"The problem for defining this kind of presence experience according to terms of tele-presence is the difficulty to talk about physical distances, about things ‘far away’ and thus far-present: tele-present. More than this we have to deal with another kind of spatiality making these distances even obsolete and allowing presence to take place in a higher, more spiritual space".[2]