CMST 1
Cicero's 5 Canons of Rhetoric
1. Invention (reasoning out truth to make case compelling) 2. Arrangement 3. Style 4. Delivery 5. Memory
How much information from our senses do we select to pay attention to each second?
40 bits
self concept
Answers who you are. all our thoughts and feelings about ourselves
mediated communication
Communication that is carried out using some channel other than those used in face-to-face communication (text, email, social)
power distance
Degree to which societies accept the idea that inequalities in the power and well-being of their citizens are due to differences in individuals' physical and intellectual capabilities and heritage
Instrumental
If you convince your sister to lend you her car by describing your clean driving record and devotion to speed limits, you are accomplishing what type of goal?
communication skills
Repeatable goal-directed behaviors and behavioral patterns that you routinely practice and that reflect knowledge of competent communication are known as
actor-observer bias
Tendency to attribute your behavior to external causes -ex: blaming mistake on pressure from others
Ethics
Which feature of competent communication requires you to treat others with respect and communicate with them honestly, kindly, and positively?
When perception-checking, why is it important to share your perception with the individual?
You must clearly articulate your impression as a prelude to hearing the other person's impression -gestalt
Gestalt Psychology
a psychological approach that emphasizes that we often perceive the whole rather than the sum of the parts -halo effect and horn effect
self-serving bias
a readiness to perceive oneself favorably -Here, Celine is taking credit for the success by making an internal attribution, rather than considering external factors such as the restaurant, nice weather, and celebrity guest.
High self-monitors are
adaptive communicators
Once you've assessed your self-esteem,
analyze ideal self
algebraic impression
analyzing the positive and negative things you learn about someone to calculate an overall impression -information that's important, unusual, or negative is usually weighted more heavily than information that's trivial, typical, or positive
perception checking
asking questions in order to see if your interpretation is correct 1. selection 2. organization 3. interpretation
Sensory channels
auditory, visual, tactile, olfactory, oral
Field of experience refers to
beliefs, attitudes, values, and experiences that a person brings to a communication event
small group communication
communication occurring within small groups of three or more people
Elton Mayo
coworker interactions on productivity
Modality
different forms of communication (face to face, text, written, visual)
Aristotle on persuasion
ethos (credibility), pathos, logos
interpersonal communication
face to face/one on one
People who perceive wide gender differences between men and women also tend to
have more negative, sexist attitudes, especially toward women.
Cicero's objectives of public speaking
instruct persuade honor
public communication
interaction with an audience
communication types
linear interactive transactional (most common)
impressions
mental images of who people are and how you feel about them
ought self
our representation of the way others think we should be
mask
outward presentation to cover private aspects
self-verification theory
people prefer to receive feedback from others that is consistent with their own self-views (self concept)
ideal self
person we would like to be
self-discrepancy theory
self esteem is defined by comparing ourselves against two standards: - ideal self - ought self (high esteem if they feel these standards can be achieved)
goals of communication
self presentation instrumental relationship
fundamental attribution error
tendency to attribute others' behavior to their internal dispositions and our own behaviors to our external situations
intercultural competence
the ability to communicate appropriately, effectively, and ethically with people from diverse backgrounds
uncertainty avoidance
the degree to which societies are willing to tolerate uncertainty and risk -low = more tolerable -high = less tolerable
saving face
the process of attempting to maintain a positive self-image in a relational situation -ex: Alec broke glass and immediately offered to buy new one
perception
the process of organizing and interpreting sensory information, enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events -selection, organization, interpretation
face
the public image of ourself that we want others to believe