Chapter 6: Considerate
internal attribution
a person acts as they do because it reflects who they are
external attribution
a person's actions may be driven by external forces influencing them to behave as they do
attribution
assigning meaning to what someone has done, whether it is we ourselves or someone else
similarity bias
assumption that a person who is like you in one way will be like you in other ways
fundamental attribution error
assumption that the cause of any negative behavior in another personal is internal (character) rather than external (factors)
self-serving bias
bias that requires that we give ourselves credit for the best of motives while attributing the worst motives to people in the same situation
audience analysis
figuring out what the audience knows, thinks, and feels in order to adapt your topic, content, visuals, and delivery
empathetic listening
listening with the purpose of helping someone else work through their own struggles and decision-making
dynamism
passionate non-verbal delivery
demographics
the basic, quantifiable information you know about the audience
occasion analysis
the different elements of context that must be considered in order to adjust to the setting
perspective taking
the process of seeing an issue from the other person's point of view
attractiveness bias
the tendency to ascribe better motives for action to attractive people than we would to less attractive people
emotional contagion
we observe others' emotions based on non-verbal communication and mirror those emotions
perception check
when you think an event has happened in a particular way and you ask to be sure