Communications Chapter 2 Vocabulary
Stereotype threat
Process in which reminding individuals of stereotypical expectations regarding important identities can impact their performance.
Categorization
A cognitive process used to organize information by placing it into larger groupings of information.
Label
A name assigned to a category based on one's perception of the category.
Interpersonal script
A relatively fixed sequence of events that functions as a guide or template for communication or behavior.
Frame
A structure that shapes how people interpret their perceptions.
Prototype
An idealized schema.
Selective attention
Consciously or unconsciously attending to just a narrow range of the full array of sensory information available.
Stereotyping
Creating schemas that overgeneralize attributes of a specific group.
Prejudice
Experiencing aversive or negative feelings towards a group as a whole or toward an individual because she or he belongs to a group.
Attribution theory
Explanation of the processes we use to judge our own and others' behavior.
Mindfulness
Having a clear focus on the activity you are engaged in, with attention to as many specifics of the event as you can.
Secondary identities
Identities such as occupation and marital status that are changeable over the life span and from situation to situation.
Primary identities
Identities such as race, ethnicity, and age that have a consistent and enduring impact on your life.
Sensory model
Model that explains how an individual culture emphasizes a few of the five senses.
Self-esteem
Part of one's self-concept; arises out of how one perceives and interprets reflected appraisals and social comparisons.
Cognitive representation
The ability to form mental models of the world.
Interpretation
The act of assigning meaning to sensory information.
Generalized other
The collection of roles, rules, norms, beliefs, and attitudes endorsed by the community in which a person lives.
Reflected appraisals
The idea that people's self-images arise primarily from the ways in which others view them and from the many messages they have received from others about who they are.
Looking-glass self
The idea that self-image results from the images others reflect back to an individual.
Particular others
The important people in an individual's life whose opinions and behavior influence the various aspects of identity.
Organization
The process by which one recognizes what sensory input represents.
Selection
The process of choosing which sensory information to focus on.
Perception
The processes of selection, organization, and interpretation of the information you collect through your senses: what you see, hear, taste, smell, and touch.
Social identity
The specific identities an individual holds in a society.
Attributional bias
The tendency to attribute one's own negative behavior to external causes and one's positive actions to internal states.
Fundamental attribution error
The tendency to attribute others' negative behavior to internal causes and their positive behaviors to external causes.
Self-serving bias
The tendency to give one's self more credit than is due when good things happen and to accept too little responsibility for those things that go wrong.
Self-concept
The understanding of one's unique characteristics as well as the similarities to, and differences from, others.
Self-fulfilling prophecy
When an individual expects something to occur, the expectation increased the likelihood that it will.
Identity
Who a person is, composed of individual and social categories a person identifies with, as well as the categories that others identify with that person.