Comm 111-Chapter 6-"Analyzing The Audience"
Attitude
A frame of mind favor of or opposed to a person, policy, belief, institution, etc.
Demographic audience analysis
Audience analysis that focuses on demographic factors such as age, gender, religion, sexual orientation, group membership, and racial, ethic, or cultural background.
Open-ended questions
Questions that allow respondents to answer however they want.
Fixed-alternative questions
Questions that offer a fixed choice between two or more alternatives.
Situational audience analysis
Audience analysis that focuses on situational factors such as the size of the audience, the physical setting for the speech, and the disposition of the audience toward the topic, the speaker, and the occasion.
Stereotyping
Creating an oversimplified image of a particular group of people, usually by assuming that all members of the group are alike.
Audience-contentedness
Keeping up the audience foremost in mind at every step of speech preparation and presentation.
Scale questions
Questions that require responses at fixed intervals along a scale of answers.
Egocentrism
The tendency of people to be concerned above all with their own values, beliefs, and well-being.