Ch. 7 -- Expectancy violations theory of Judee Burgoon
Personal space expectations: conform or deviate?
- Burgoon defined personal space as the "invisible, variable volume of space surrounding an individual that defines that individual's preferred distance from others." -she claimed that the size and shape of our personal space depend on our cultural norms and individual preferences, but our shape reflects a compromise between the conflicting approach-avoidance needs that we as humans have for affiliation and privacy
Judee Burgoon
- a comm scholar at the university of arizona, wrote the journal article that stimulated my thinking -the article was a follow-up piece on the nonverbal expectancy violations model she had introduced in HCR two years earlier
IAT
-according to IAT, the pattern of response would therefore be one of reciprocity or convergence
Communicator reward valence
-burgoon's term -the sum of positive and negative attributes brought to the encounter plus the potential to reward or punish in the future -the resulting perception is usually a mix of good and bad and falls somewhere on a scale between those two poles
Edward hall's book
-filled with examples of "ugly Americans" who were insensitive to the spatial customs of other cultures -he recommended that in order to be effective, we learn to adjust our nonverbal behavior to conform to the communication rules of our partner -we shouldn't cross a distance boundary uninvited
EVT
-offers a "soft determinism" rather than hard-core universal laws -the terms may, more likely, can be, and relatively reflect her belief that too many factors affect comm to ever allow us to discover simple cause-and-effect relationships
What is Burgoon convinced of
-that all cultures have a similar structure of expected communication behavior, but that the content of those expectations can differ markedly from culture to culture
Ambiguous violation
Embedded in a host of relationally warm signals takes on a positive cast
Three core concepts of EVT
Expectancy, violation valence, and communicator reward valence
Relationship
Factors include similarity, familiarity, liking and relative status -Burgoon discovered that people of all ages and stations in life anticipate the lower-status people will keep their distance
Equivocal violation
From a punishing communication stiffens our resistance
Burgoon's retreat from arousal as an explanatory mechanism
Has been more gradual -she originally stated that people felt physiologically aroused when their proxemic expectations were violated -later she softened the concept to an orienting response or a mental alertness that focuses attention on the violator -she now views arousal as a side effect of a partner's deviation and no longer considers it a necessary link between expectancy violation and comm outcomes such as attraction, credibility, persuasion, and involvement
Communication characteristics
Include all of the age/sex/place-of-birth demographics requested on applications, but they also include personal features that may affect expectation even more -physical appearance, personality and communication style
Touch
Is fraught with meaning in every society, but the who, when, where, and how of touching are a matter of culture-specific standards and customs
Burgoon's nonverbal expectancy violations model
Offered a counterpoint to hall's advice -she didn't argue with the idea that people have definite expectations about how close others should come
In the 1960s, Illinois institute of technology anthropologists Edward hall coined what term?
Proxemics to refer to the study of people's use of space as a special elaboration of culture -he entitled his book The Hidden Dimension because he was convinced that most spatial interpretation is outside our awareness -he claimed Americans have four proxemics zones
What does she hope to do?
She hopes to show a link among surprising interpersonal behavior and attraction, credibility, influence and involvement
Social penetration theory
Suggests that we live in an interpersonal economy in which we all "take stock" of the relational value of others we meet
Burgoon has recognized what
That EVT does not fully account for the overwhelming prevalence of reciprocity that has been found in interpersonal interactions
Threat threshold
The hypothetical outer boundary of intimate space; a breach by an uninvited other occasions fight or flight
Personal space
The invisible, variable volume of space surrounding an individual that defines that individual's preferred distance from others.
With all things equal what does burgoon sau
The nature of the violation will influence the response it triggers more than the reward potential of the one who did it
Violation valence
The perceived positive or negative value assigned to a break of expectations, regardless of who the violator is
Questions that cross our minds
What can you do for me? What can you do to me?
Expectancy
What people predict will happen, rather than what they desire
Requirements (R)
Are the outcome that fulfill our basic needs to survive, be safe, belong, and have a sense of self-worth. These are the pan human motivations that Abraham Maslow outlined in his famous hierarchy of needs
Why does Burgoon think the expectancy violator's power to reward or punish is so crucial?
Because puzzling violations force victims to search the social context for clues to their meaning
The idea of personal space wasn't original with
Burgoon
How has she produced a complete theory
By extending its scope
How has Burgoon streamlined her model
By removing extraneous features
RED factors
Coalesce or meld into our interaction position of what's needed, anticipated, and preferred
What begins with cultural norms
Context -also included the setting of the conversation
Arousal, relational
A heightened state of awareness, orienting response, or mental alertness that stimulates a review of the relationship
Interaction position
A person's initial stance toward an interaction as determined by a blend of personal requirements, expectations, and desires (RED)
Reciprocity
A strong human tendency to respond to another's a to with similar behavior
Interaction adaptation theory
A systematic analysis of how people adjust their approach when another's behavior doesn't align with what's needed, anticipated, or preferred -this theory is an extensions and expansion of EVT
Desires (D)
What we personally would like to see happen
Expectations (E)
What we think really will happen
The term elegant
When applied to theories, the term suggests "gracefully concise and simple; admirably succinct."
