Individual Differences in Perceptions of Social Presence: Exploring the Role of Personality in Online Distance Learning

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Abstract

Social presence is a central concept relating to interpersonal aspects in online distance learning. However, the conditions and determinants of its emergence are not yet fully understood. As a construct rooted in social psychology, the potential of individual differences predicting perceptions of social presence has been largely neglected, thus, constituting a gap in our understanding. In a sample of 201 online distance education students, the merits of a trait-level view of social presence were investigated. To this end, personality was assessed using the Big Five personality inventory, exploring both a dimensional and a typological approach. Results suggest that specific personality typologies may be more prone to perceptions of social presence, thus calling for an extension of our theoretical modeling of the construct.

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Weidlich, J., Kreijns, K., & Bastiaens, T. J. (2021). Individual Differences in Perceptions of Social Presence: Exploring the Role of Personality in Online Distance Learning. Open Education Studies, 3(1), 188–201. https://doi.org/10.1515/edu-2020-0153

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