Interpersonal Communication: Everyday Encounters ch 1-3
speech community
A group of people who share norms, regulative rules, and constitutive rules for communicating and interpreting the communication of others.
punctuation
Defining the beginning and ending of interaction or interaction episodes.
Listening to Support Others
One of the three goals of listening; focuses more on the relationship level of meaning than on the content level of meaning. Aims to understand and respond to others' feelings, thoughts, and perceptions in affirming ways
Listening for Information
One of the three goals of listening; focuses on gaining and evaluation ideas, facts, opinions, reasons, and so forth
Listening for Pleasure
One of the three goals of listening; motivated by the desire to enjoy rather than to gain information or to support others
Interpersonal Communication Involves Ethical Choices
Principle Three
Interpersonal Communication is Irreversible
Principle Two
Principle Eight: Interpersonal Communication Effectiveness Can Be Learned
Principles of Interpersonal Communication
paralanguage
Vocal communication, such as accents and inflection, that does not use words.
Minimal Encouragers
A brief phrase ("Go on") or sound ("um-hm") that gently invites another person to elaborate by expressing our interest in hearing more.
Listening
A complex process that consists of being mindful, hearing, selecting and organizing information, interpreting communication, responding, and remembering. Listening is very different from hearing
Paraphrasing
A method of clarifying another's meaning by reflecting our interpretations of his or her communication back to him or her
Transactional Model
A model of communication as a dynamic process that changes over time and in which participants assume multiple roles.
Interactive Model
A model that represents communication as a feedback process, in which listeners and speakers both simultaneously send and receive messages.
Linear Model
A model that represents communication as a one-way process that flows in one direction, from sender to receiver. Linear models do not capture the dynamism of communication or the active participation of all communicators.
artifacts
A personal object that we use to announce our identity and personalize our environment.
Interpersonal Communication
A selective, systemic process that allows people to reflect and build personal knowledge of one another and create shared meanings .
indexing
A technique of linking our evaluations of speech and events to specific times or circumstances, to remind ourselves that evaluations are not static or unchanging.
I-You Communication
Acknowledging one another as more than just objects, but they don't fully engage each other as unique individuals. A majority of our interactions are I-You.
nonverbal communication
All forms of communication other than words themselves. Includes inflection and other vocal qualities, haptics, and several other behaviors.
symbols
An abstract, arbitrary, and ambiguous representation of a phenomenon.
proxemics
An aspect of nonverbal communication that includes space and our uses of it.
loaded language
An extreme form of evaluative language that relies on words that strongly slant perceptions and thus meanings.
static evaluation
Assessments that suggest that something is unchanging. Bob is impatient is a static evaluation.
immediacy
Behavior that increases perceptions of closeness between communicators.
Mindfulness
Being fully present in the moment. A concept from Zen Buddhism; the first step of listening and the foundation of all the other steps
kinesics
Body position and body motions, including those of the face.
regulative rules
Communication rules that regulate interaction by specifying when, how, where, and with whom to talk about certain things.
Monopolizing
Continually forcing communication on ourselves instead of on the person who is talking
5. Meaning Creating
Features of Interpersonal Communication
Selective Listening
Focusing only on selected parts of communication. We listen selectively when we screen out parts of a message that don't interest us or with which we disagree and when we rivet attention on parts of communication that do interest us or with which we agree
5. Commit to Ethical Communication
Guidelines for Interpersonal Communication Competence
"I" language
Language in which one takes personal responsibility for feelings with words that own the feelings and do not project responsibility for the feelings onto others.
hate speech
Language that dehumanizes others and that reflects and often motivates hostility toward the target of the speech.
"you" language
Language that projects responsibility for one's own feelings or actions onto other people. Not recommended for interpersonal
Ambushing
Listening carefully to an exchange for the purpose of attacking the speaker
Literal Listening
Listening only to the content level of meaning and ignoring the relationship level of meaning
5. Self-Actualization Needs.
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
3. Transactional Models
Models of Interpersonal Communication
Defensive Listening
Perceiving personal attacks, criticisms, or hostile undertones in communication when none are intended
Interpersonal Communication Develops and Sustains Relationships
Principle Six
Pseudolistening
Pretending to listen
Interpersonal Communication Effectiveness Can Be Learned
Principle Eight
Metacommunication Affects Meaning
Principle Five
People Construct Meanings in Interpersonal Communication
Principle Four
We Cannot NOT Communicate
Principle One
Interpersonal Communication Is Not a Panacea
Principle Seven
arbitrary
Random or not constrained by necessity. Symbols are arbitrary because there is no necessary reason for a particular symbol to stand for a particular referent.
abstract
Removed from concrete reality. Symbols are abstract because they are inferences and generalizations abstracted from a total reality.
totalizing
Responding to a person as if one aspect of his or her life were the totality of the person.
constitutive rules
Rules that define what communication means by specifying how certain communicative acts are to be counted.
communication rules
Shared understandings of what communication means and what behaviors are appropriate in various situations.
ambiguous
Subject to multiple meanings. Symbols are ambiguous because their meanings vary from person to person and context to context.
Responding
Symbolizing your interest in what is being said with observable feedback to speakers during the process of interaction; the fifth of the six elements of listening
chronemics
The aspect of nonverbal communication that involves our perceptions and use of time to define identities and interaction.
Hearing
The physiological result of sound waves hitting our eardrums. Unlike listening, hearing is a passive process
Remembering
The process of recalling what you have heard; the sixth element of listening
I-Thou Communication
The rarest kind of relationship. The meeting of others in their wholeness and individuality. Instead of dealing with them as occupants of social roles, we see them as unique human beings whom know and accept in their totality.
haptics
The sense of touch and what it means. Haptics are part of nonverbal communication.
linguistic determinism
The theory that language determines what we can perceive and think. This theory has been largely discredited, although the less strong claim that language shapes thought is widely accepted.
I-It Communication
Treating others very impersonally, almost as objects. We do not acknowledge the humanity of the other people; we may not even affirm their existence.