1/144
Looks like no tags are added yet.
Name | Mastery | Learn | Test | Matching | Spaced |
---|
No study sessions yet.
Myths of Communication
Communication is a cure all, communication is common sense, communication quantity equals quality
Linear model
one way channel → a sender sends a message through a channel to a receiver in an atmosphere of noise
Interactive
the same linear, but it is a two way channel, it incorporates feedback
Transactional
each of us is a sender or receiver, it affects all parties involved; has sender & receiver on both sides, message, feedback, fields of experience, noise, and relationship dimension
Channel
medium through which a message travels- written or oral
Sender
initiator and encoder
Receiver
decoder of a message
Message
something that produces/conveys meaning
Noise
interference with effective transmission and reception of a message
Feedback
the receivers verbal and nonverbal responses to a message
Fields of experience
include our cultural background, ethnicity, geographic location, extent of travel and general personal experiences accumulated over the course of a lifetime
Context
the environment in which communcation occurs- who, what, when, where, why, how
Content dimension
refers to what is actually said and done
Relationship dimension
refers to how that message defines or redefines the association between individuals
Communication competence
engaging in communication with others that is perceived to be both effective and appropriate in a given context
Constructive climate
pattern of openness, and a pattern of supportiveness
Destructive climate
closed ness and defensiveness
perceptual process
The process of selecting, organizing and interpreting data from our senses in which we give meaning to our experiences
Schema
mental frameworks that create meaningful patterns from stimuli
Prototype
the most representative example
Stereotype
a generalization about a group or category of people
Script
a predictable sequence of events that indicates what we are expected to do in a given situation
Self concept
the sum total of everything that encompasses the self-referential term "me"
Reflected appraisal
refers to messages you receive from others that assess your self- concept
self-disclosure
The process of purposely revealing to others personal information about yourself that is significant and that others would not know unless you tell them
Breadth
the range of subjects discussed
Depth
refers to how personal you become with your discussion
self-serving bias
The tendency to attribute our successful behavior to ourselves but to assign external circumstances to our unsuccessful behavior
self-fulfilling prophecy
Acting on an incorrect expectation that produces the expected behavior and confirms the original impression
fundamental attribution error
blaming personal traits instead of situations for people's behavior
empathy
thinking and feeling what you perceive another to be thinking and feeling; putting yourself in another person's shoes
culture
A learned set of enduring values, beliefs, and practices that are shared by an identifiable, large group of people with a common history
Multiculturalism
a social intellectual movement that promotes the value of diversity as a core principle and insists that all cultural groups be treated as equals
Individualistic
me-oriented; self-promotion; people loosely linked to each other; motivated by own needs and goals; direct and competitive
Collectivist
we-oriented; group support (self-promotion discouraged); people loosely linked to multiple groups; motivated by groups needs and goals; harmonious, not confrontational
Low Power distance
horizontal culture; everyone same level; values relatively equal power sharing & discourages attention to status differences and rankings
High Power distance
vertical culture; respect authority; relatively strong emphasis on maintaining power differences
Feminine
affection, nurturance, sensitivity, compassion and emotional openness
Masculine
dominance, ambitiousness, assertiveness, competitiveness and drive for achievement
phonemes
individual units of sound (vowels, consonants, combos - sh, ch)
morphemes
smallest unit of meaning in a language (walk, for go; -ing/-s/-ion)
syntax
rules that govern combining words into phrases and phrases into sentences
semantics
governs the meanings of words and sentences
structure
set of rules that specify how units of language can be meaningfully combined
productivity
the capacity of language to transform a small number of phonemes into whatever words, phrases, and sentences that you require to communicate your abundance of thoughts and feelings
displacement
your ability to use language to talk about things that don't exist in the physical here and now and things in the past/future (ex. unicorns)
self-reflexive
use language to talk about language
abstracting
process where we form vague conceptions of our world by leaving out details
sense experience
sense of physical world around you; objects, people, occurrences we notice and share with others
descriptions
verbal reports that sketch what we perceive of our senses. (things always get lost in translation, not everyone imagines the same)
inferences
conclusions about the unknown, based on the known; guesses
judgment
subjective evaluation of objects, people, events- my partner's generous
linguistic determinism
we are prisoners of our native language, it defines us
linguistic relativity
native language influences but does not imprison us
connotation
subjective meaning; changes from person to person
denotation
dictionary definition; objective meaning, shared meaning; common usage
jargon
specialized language
euphemism
nice way of saying something not so nice
non-verbal
sharing of meaning non-linguistically, multi-channeled
verbal
sharing of meaning linguistically, single-channeled
repetition
use both a verbal and non-verbal to increase clarity and credibility of message; nodding after saying 'yes' you repeat the verbal message
accentuation
nonverbal message adds emphasis to verbal message; scream or whisper to enhance power and seriousness of message
emblem
gestures that have a precise meaning separate from verbal communication; ex. middle finger
substitution
nonverbal cue that substitutes for a verbal (wave = hello)
regulation
conversation regulated by nonverbal cues
contradiction
nonverbal goes against verbal message; mixed message, saying "i love you" in flat voice
kinesics
the study of facial communication, gestures, body language
haptics
study of touch
paralanguage
vocal cues, the way we say something ex. arabs talk loud to symbolize strength
proxemics
study of distance and territoriality
territoriality
predisposition to defend one's area ex. "that's my desk"
comprehending
making sense of sounds, processing meaning
retaining
taking in knowledge, remembering what you heard
responding
interactions & reactions from listening to the information
informational listening
attempts to comprehend the message of the speaker
critical listening
understanding the message and merits of claims and evaluating them
empathic listening
requires us to take perspective of other person, listen for what other person needs and wants
conversational narcissism
tendency of listeners to turn topic onto themselves
competitive interrupting
occurs when we dominate the conversation by seizing the floor from others while they're speaking
glazing over
occurs when listener's attention wanders
pseudolistening
pretending to listen
ambushing
occurs when we listen for weaknesses and ignore strengths
evaluating response
make a judgement about the person's conduct
advising response
tells people how they should act
content-only response
comprehends the literal meaning of messages from others but doesn't recognize the feelings that ride piggyback
probing response
seeks more info by asking questions
supporting response
effort to focus attention on the other person; includes expression of care, concern, and interest
understanding response
requires a listener to check his/her perceptions for comprehension of the speaker's message or to paraphrase the message to check accuracy
explicit rules
directly expressed, specifically set out norms; ex: JMU Honor Code, "No shoes, no service"
implicit rules
Indirectly indicated (implied); you know the rules, though they aren't stated; learn through observation; ex. see kids eat in class
demographics
age, gender, culture, ethnicity, and group affiliations
values
generally shared view of what is deemed good, right, or worthwhile thinking or behavior
captive audience
disengaged listeners; assembles to hear you speak b/c they are compelled to, not b/c they expect entertainment
committed audience
agreeable listeners; voluntarily assembles b/c they are interested in the topic or speaker; in this case speaker's main goal is to inspire action and thoughts
contrary audience
listeners that are initially hostile to your position on issues
concerned audience
eager listeners; passionate about issues and ideas; speaker's main goal is teach more & support an idea
casual audience
unexpected listeners; stop to listen out of curiosity and leave when they lose interest; goal of speaker is to connect with audience and create interest
general purpose
identifies overall goal of speech (to inform, describe, persuade)
central idea
identifies the main concept, point, issue or conclusion you want audience to understand, believe, feel
specific purpose
a concise, precise phrase composed of clear language that encompasses both the general purpose and the central idea and indicates what the speaker hopes to accomplish with the speech