COM1000 midterm
Five Stages of listening
(1) hearing (2) attending: ear picks up sound and sends info to the brain and then attend (focus) on it (3) understanding: making sense of what our eardrum has picked up/interpret message (4) respond (5) remember: remember what we heard and understood from the sounds our ear picked up
monchronic culture
- A stitch in time saves nine - Time flies - agendas - Set clock/watches - Time designated driver of what happens in a day
Self-concept
- General perception of oneself - answers the question who am I - mental mirror that reflects how we view ourselves
Benefits of studying communication
- Help you become a more effective communicator - self understanding and growth - as competence builds confidence will too - critical thinking, problem-solving and teamwork
polychronic cultures
- Island time - Time is flexible - relationship based - what did you get to do list
Listening
- The receiver listens - conflict and miscommunication can occur when the receiver has a lot more going on his or her head - attempting to and making sense of what you hear
High context culture
- Use indirect/implicit type of communication - many people of high context view people who use more direct language as rude/mean and aggressive, loud, obnoxious
Six types of listening
- appreciative: listening to radio/movie; enjoyment and entertainment - task oriented: specifically listening for task/action - relationship oriented: scanning message for things related/relevant to relationship - empathic/supportive: trying to understand what person is feeling/felt; emotional intelligence important - comprehensive/analytical: you're listening to understand - critical listening: evaluating/judging; determining if source speaking credible - pseudo: fake listening
Basic nonverbal codes
- objectics - proxemics - chronemics - vocalics - kinesics - oculesis - haptics - olfactics - gustorics how we interpret or misinterpret these symbols is based upon context, culture, knowledge, exposure, and perception
Appropriateness
- relationship dimension - message is suitable for the receiver in the relationship between you within the given content - make sure it is relational appropriate (norms and expectations between you) and situational appropriate
Low context culture
- use a very direct style of communication or explicit - United States - talking to others of the same culture not much of a problem
code
- we take our thoughts, feelings, and attitudes and in order to communicate them through a channel, we convert them into codes, both verbal and nonverbal so that receivers can decode them - this conversion can be both intentional and unintentional
pupilometry
-study of size change in pupil, reflect emotional state -dilated pupils= connection -restricted pupils = no connection - dilate when we see something familiar and safe
How to be an effective communicator
1. State ideas clearly 2. communicate ethically 3. Recognize when it's appropriate to communicate 4. identify communication goals 5. Select the most appropriate and effective medium for communicating 6. demonstrate credibility 7. identify and manage misunderstandings 8. manage conflicts 9. be open minded 10. listen attentively
7 major facial expressions
1. anger: eyebrows down lips in a line 2. fear: mouth tense, eyebrows straight 3. happiness: Wrinkle around eyes 4. contempt: smirk; raises one side of mouth 5. surprise: mouth is loose, eyebrows round 6. sadness: hardest one to fake; almost always real, frown and vertical eyebrows 7. disgust: upper lip pulled up, can check if someone is thoughtfully racist
Key aspects of emotional intelligence
1. self regulation: managing emotion 2. self awareness: Understand environment and manage emotions to fit environment 3. personal internal motivation: Setting in accomplishing goals; trying new things 4. empathy: Recognizing in understanding other peoples emotions 5. social skills: interacting with others well
Self-serving bias
Attribute success to internal factors in your failures on external ones self-enhancement and self presentation When the speaker doesn't present well and blames it on bad luck
Coculture
Belonging to two different cultures - have a different communication practices within a given society
sex
Biological make up
Selective attention
Choice to select info that the person wants to see
Self disclosure
Choice you make and how much you disclose to others in the way you choose to disclose
frame of reference
Comes from past experiences, culture raised, attitudes and values, knowledge not one person has the same frame of reference effects and is affected by other elements opinions we have and feelings impacts both encoding and decoding of messages
Culture
Communication differs from one culture to another -culture encompasses learned symbols values language and norms be sensitive to culture differences and be aware
Multiple looking glass
Depending on who's perspective you are taking - example: so while one person might see you one way somebody else might see you another. Other people will continue to see you in all these different ways and it all depends on who's frame you're looking through when you see yourself
External noise
Distractions that originate in the environment ex. AC ,people, talking ,something physical/visible
internal noise
Distractions that originate within the person ex sick, emotional, bored, tired
senders
Encode and send a message
Low context culture
Explicit/direct language
The generalized other
General society or groups; how does society/certain groups view you
Damaging self face
I was really stupid of me. I should have let you know that was going to happen - Taking the own blame; defacing myself
Self-concept
Idea of self that is learned over time in the influence by internal thoughts
Culture subjective
It's relative to your point of reference
Norms
Learn the rules or expectations that guide behavior within a culture
Low uncertainty avoidance culture
More open to unfamiliar situations, diversity, and ideas
Low power distance culture
No individual or group is inherently superior to anyone else
Symbols
Not inherently meaningful meanings are in people, not in the words for example if you tell me the word owl I associate it with a nocturnal wing animal. If you show me a symbol of the word owl in a different language I will not understand it and it won't have meaning to me
Components of perceptual process
Organize, selecting, interpreting
Perceptual differences
People can interpret information drastically different. There are five major influences
presenting self or face
Public image of yourself; the way you want others to see you
In group
Refer to groups you identify with
Spotting shame
Slight forehead touch
Implicit bias
Social stereotypes on an unconscious level
Eyebrow raise
Super curious, engaged
words have
Symbol: the word reference: thought/meaning referent: image
Ethnocentrism
Tendency to judge other cultures practices as inferior to one's own - it can be easy to believe when culture values/traditions are right for everyone, but being different does not mean being wrong
internal discourse
Thanking/concentration and analysis - daydreaming, visualization, contemplation, meditation
Emotional intelligence
The ability to monitor your own and others' feelings and emotions to discriminate among them and use this information to guide your thinking in action
context/situation
The communication model all happens in the context or situation noise is some thing that can interfere: anything that impedes the sending or receiving of a message (2 forms)
Looking Glass Self (Cooley)
The image we believe other people have of us - what we see when we imagine how other people see us - derive not only from our own inner selves but with the interactions we have with other people
Perceived self
The person you believe yourself to be
perception
The process of selecting organizing and interpreting information; are used to form identity, create impressions of others, and make decisions
Role of technology in communication
The transfer of information via electron it devices such as computers tablets and smart phones known as computer mediated communication
Expectation
The way in individual believes things will turn out; this affects your decisions and influences what you believe you can achieve
Is communication symbolic
True
Content meaning
What I want you to know
Selecting information
What gets your attention and what gets ignored
Self presentation
What you choose to disclose about yourself to others and how you do that
Stereotyping
When you apply generalizations to an individual member of a group based on the assumptions and beliefs on that group example: speaker doesn't mention benefits of college because they assume audience can't afford it
Interpreting information
When you assign meaning to experiences
Relational meaning
Who we are to each other
Self discrepancy theory
asserts that we have beliefs and expectations about self (actual and potential) but do not always match with experience - Actual self: Attributes that you or someone else believes you possess - ideal self: attributes you or someone else would like you to have - ought self: attributes you or someone else believes you should possess
aural non-oral communication
aural refers to auditory sounds
eye blocking
blocking field of vision because don't want to see something; opposite of pupils dilating
kinesics
body movement; gestures, posture, facial expressions
Stereotypes
can limit our view of another person because we are quick to make judgments about who we think they are
Organize
categorize information into appropriate areas using your innate and learned knowledge proximity similarity difference
Linear communication model
claude shannon and warren weaver sender > message > receiver used for traditionally for mass communication only goes one direction
intercultural communication
communication that occurs in interactions between people who are culturally different -do you language we choose and how loud, fast, we speak and if we use hand speaking or not can be insulting to others. May relate directly to self
Effectiveness
connected to content dimension ability to encode a message sufficiently for accurate decoding by the receiver verbal and nonverbal consistency: what we are seeing matches how we are saying it
Two dimensions of all messages
content and relationship every message carries two meanings
Two Types of Meanings
denotative:dictionary definition; what we think people think a certain word means connotative: personal meanings people associate with the symbol; very personal everybody has a slightly different meaning * all words have both of these things ex parent denotative: one who produces offspring connotative: loving, caring mother or father who takes care of his/her children
out-group
describes groups of people you see as different from yourself
Impact of mediated online communication
disinhibition: Tendency to transmit messages without considering their consequences hyper personal communication: an accelerated discussion of personal topics that leads to faster relational development superficial relationships: Focus on quantity rather than quality
Hearing
does not equal listening - The physiological detection of sound; physically what's happening when ear and eardrum pick up sound waves and send information to the brain
Encoding
draw on all of our past experiences, vocab, what we know about the other person to string together various symbols that will relate a message to the other person that they will understand
Psychological
encompass emotions, attitude, and other mental factors; mindset affects perception
the want to fit in
enculturation: Process of acquiring a culture acculturation: The process through which a person or group from one culture comes to adopt practices and values of another culture, while still holding onto their distinct culture
Competent communication
equals effective and appropriate
cultural
ethnic background in community shape perception Language, religion, general way of life
Non-vercal
everything else that goes along with the message examples facial expressions, clothing, distance, posture, but arms and hands are doing, and gestures
How does the context/situation affect how you communicate
example during a lecture you have a question. You would raise your hand or wait until they ask for questions. If you are hanging out with your friends, you would not raise your hand you would just ask the question
Attribution Errors
explains how people try to understand the cause of others actions internal: caused by something inside the person external: stems from situation not person stable: due to unchanging permanent factors unstable: due to changing temporary factors example: speaker receives confused looks during speech and blames it on lack of knowledge
oculesis
eye movements
High power distance culture
feel pressure to be in relationships with those in their social classes
Selective perception
filtering what you see in here to suit your needs speaker choose a topic that interests him without regard for the audiences needs
Stereotyping
generalizations negative, may cause prejudices and discrimination
Hands
helps to get message across
Social
how you view and create assumptions about others and how social status and gender affect those assumptions
High context culture
implicit indirect language
individualistic culture
individual achievement is valued over group accomplishments, and competition is valued over cooperation
selective memory bias
individuals tendency to select and remember info that reinforce stereotypes; can be offensive leading to misunderstandings resulting in damaged relationships
Types of communication
intrapersonal: talking to self dyadic: one on one (interpersonal) group: more than two people organizational: within a specific organization mass: news and emails intercultural: different ethnicities mediated: use of technology public: speakers
Visual communication
is a field that focuses only on the visual elements of communication; color in ads
Saving others face
it wasn't your fault, you didn't know. Nobody told you
Nonverbal and culture
it's important to understand who you're talking to One thing in one language may not be offensive but it is in another in the United States a thumbs up means good or OK and in other countries it is found offensive
Face work
maintaining your own image and that of others - preserving our face identity - verbal and nonverbal communication behaviors have a lot to do with this
mouth block
natural instinct trying to keep something in
Experiential
past experiences in encompass events in your life that influence the way you see the present
Significant others
people whose opinions matter most to us; example parents, celebrity, significant other, God
errors in our perception
perceptual errors can distort the way you make judgments about people situations and important topics which affects how you communicate
Self-esteem
personal evaluation of own self worth - physical, task/performance, social, spiritual - Global self-esteem: weighted (areas that matter most to hold more value) ex good task/performance self-esteem and low physical self-esteem. Value task/performance more so it's global self-esteem
Interactions with others
personal relationship between you Past experiences How will you like each other Respect cultural norms: please very big role in communication (what's acceptable and what's not)
Physiological
physical and chemical aspects of the body and how they affect perception height weight
perceptual differences
physiological influences: height/weight psychological: emotions, attitudes, other mental factors social: view and create assumptions about others cultural: ethnic background and community experiential: past experiences
high uncertainty avoidance culture
prefer to interact with other people and in situations similar to them
interactive communication model
process involving senders and receivers, influenced by feedback and fields of experience (classroom instruction, group presentations, weekly team/coworker meetings, public speakers who interpret audience feedback and modify their message as needed) broad variety of communication forms
Receivers
receive and decode message
transactional model of communication
recognizes that we simultaneously send and receive messages; a cyclical model of the communication process
senders
regardless whether or not intend to send a relational meaning along with message, the receiver will be decode both a content meaning and relational meaning
Micro expression
response to the thought process and internal emotions - Involuntary - 20 ms - people around the world have the same facial expressions to certain events - children born blind have the same facial expressions meaning that they are not taught - over 10,000 expressions
Saving selfs face
saying oh well that wasn't my fault
Three aspects of intrapersonal communication
self-concept, perception, expectation
Intrapersonal communication
self-talk, the communication we have with ourselves - purpose 1. clarify complex idea 2. Analyze difficult situation 3. solve a challenging problem 4. so on - primary function: well of self-awareness by taking in your surroundings and using that information to assess this situation; allows for self insurance, self discovery, self delusion
Communication model
sender, message, receiver, feedback, context, frame of reference
Message
sent through channels like email , phone. can be both verbal and nonverbal
olfactics
smell
Gender
socially constructed attributions associated with a particular sex
Solo vocal communication
speaking aloud to oneself
verbal
spoken, using words words and meaning with those words
Proxemics
study of personal space; different amounts of space for different people
haptics
study of touch; who, where, how long, context
gustorics
taste
reflected appraisals
the idea that people's self-images arise primarily from the ways that others view them and from the many messages they have received from others about who they are - how we go about the process of self-esteem - The looking glass self
Chronemics
the study of how humans use and structure time; kronos (greek god of time)
objectics
the study of the human use of clothing and other artifacts as nonverbal codes
Head tilt
tilt head to hear better; shows curiosity and interest; slight tilt with triple nod
collectivistic cultures
value group over individual and focuses on cooperation, duty, and loyalty
Masculine culture
values ambition, achievement, consumption of material goods
Feminine culture
values caretaking and service to others
vocalics
vocal sounds
Decoding
we also pool from all those things in order to filter the message and make sense of it all
Halo effect
when in impression you had in one instance influences your opinion in another instance example: speaker surprised about negative reception presenting topic and receiving positive day before
Blocking
when we cover or block a part of our body as a barrier between us and someone else - crossing arms, hold the notebook close - if someone suddenly does this, they may feel offended or uncomfortable
Recency effect
when you allow the most recent info influence your perception example: speaker fails to make a strong concluding statement
Solo written communication
writing that is not intended for others to read; diary journal personal blog
Damaging others face
you're so stupid, you never do you things the right way. You should have known to do this better - not always so direct; snide remarks