interpersonal communication uiowa
cooperative principle
The assumption that people who are talking to each other are working together to advance the conversation.
Definition of a theory
a description of the relationships among concepts that promote an understanding of a phenomenon
how we select what to pay attention to
point of view, intensity of stimuli, personal relevance, and consistency with norms and expectations
Characteristics
potential for universal meaning, variable intensity: analogic codes (symbols that bare a physical resemblance to the thing that they represent), simultaneous transaction, can complement, accent, substitute, and contradict.
self-disclosure
process of communication in which one person reveals information about themselves to another
micro-momentary expressions and deception
quick, instant, short expression that someone might have that shows an utterance of deceit
biased language
racist, sexist, heterosexist
Self-concept
the sum of total knowledge you have about yourself
self-serving bias
the tendency to makes internal attributions for our successes and external attributions for our failures
How power affects language use
the theory focuses on how we perform speech acts that might have a negative effect on a partner - criticizing a person, asking for a favor, or interrupting a conversation. When the other person has more power, we try to minimize the negative impact of our words. In addition, we have less freedom to impose on people with whom we have a more distant relationship. When we need to soften the impact of an intrusive speech act, we use polite messages.
Language is arbitrary
there is no inherent reason for using a particular object of idea
self-concept
total knowledge you have of yourself
communication theory of identity layers
- Personal: perceptions about yourself - Enacted: characteristics revealed through communication - Relational: characteristics that are related to relationships with others -Communal:related to a person's group membership
How feelings and communication are related
-Emotions cause communication -Communication describes emotions -Communication affects emotions -Emotions shape interpretations of messages
Components of emotion
-Self-perceptions: people's own awareness of how they feel -Physiological changes: physical changes that occur in conjunction with feelings -Nonverbal markers: changes in appearance that occur when a person experiences affect -Action tendencies: The behavior that emotions compel us to perform
How gender affects language
-Women tend to use more hedges, qualifiers and questions -Men tend to make more declarative statements
3 dimensions of relational communication
-affliliation/disaffiliation -dominance/submissiveness -involvement
appraisal theories of emotion
-appraisals: people monitor the environment to assess whether conditions help or hinder their goals (judgements are called appraisals) -action tendencies: the behavior an emotion compels us to perform, they are often behaviors that will close the gap between the appraised situation and our goals
Features of communication competence
-appropriateness: communication is appropriate when the messages that people produce match the requirements of the situation, we can tell what is appropriate due to social rules -effectiveness: your communication is effective when you are able to produce the outcomes that you want -satisfaction: competent communication is enjoyable -ethics: what constitutes right versus wrong or good versus evil, demonstrate respect for other people
How culture shapes communication and communication reflects culture
-boundary markers: culture marks messages or behaviors that are considered inappropriate -myths: sacred stories about heros or villians (ex. santa) -rituals: communion, national anthem, Christmas, 4th of July
transactional model of communication
-communication is continuous -interpersonal communication is dynamic -communication is created by own experiences -It is consequential, irreversible, and imperfect
Content and relationship-level meanings
-content: literal meaning conveyed -relationship: tells us how to interpret the content level
definition of emotions vs. moods
-emotion: fleeting feelings that arise in particular situations -moods: feelings that are lasting or ongoing
barriers to intercultural communication
-ethnocentrism: the tendency to see one's own cultural beliefs as more correct, appropriate, and moral than other cultures -marginalization: when less dominant groups fo people in a society are treated as inferior or unimportant
dimensions of attributions
-external (concluding that a person's behaviors are caused by the situation) vs. internal(concluding that behaviors are caused by characteristics of the actor) -controllable vs. uncontrollable
Facets of the self
-open self: information about you that you are aware of and that you share with other people -hidden self: information about you that you are aware of, but you keep secret from others -blind self: information about you that others are aware of, but you do not realize about yourself -unknown self: information about you that neither you nor others are aware of
Dimensions that distinguish culture
-outcome-oriented: value achievements, deadlines, and getting a job (American) -process-oriented: appreciate the experiences gained by working on a task -uncertainty-avoidance: prefer stable routines that avoid risks or novel experiences -uncertainty-seeking: prefer diverse, novel, and even risky experiences
characteristics of interpersonal communication
-purposeful: some kind of end goal -transactional: there is a give & take in relationship interactions -relational: defines and affects the relationship -irreversible: no take backs -synchronous: happening at the same time -IPC is complex: meaningful and purposeful
Characteristics of the self
-the self is subjective: you are who you think you are -the self is multifaceted: there are a number of sides to our self-concept that reflect the roles and relationships we have in different aspects of our lives -the self is dynamic: it changes over time and between situations
Definition of culture
-the values, beliefs, and customs that we share with a group of people -an unsaid system of symbols and meanings
maxim of relevance
A conversational rule that communicators should make contributions to conversation that are pertinent to the topic.
maxim of quantity
A conversational rule that communicators should provide sufficient information to advance the conversation.
Johari's window
Open, hidden, blind, unknown self
Communication Accommodation Theory
Theory of how we can reduce and magnify communication differences between two people -convergence: movement toward matching others communication style -divergence: movement away from matching others communication style -accommodation: is multidimensional and dynamic
self-fulfilling prophecy
a belief that comes true because we are already acting as if it is true
hurt
a blended emotion that includes sadness, fear, and sometimes anger
social awareness
ability to understand emotions of other people and respond
relationship management
ability to use your awareness of your own emotions & those of others to manage interactions successfully
jealousy
an emotion that arises from perceptions that a valued relationship is threatened by a partner's competing interests
attributions
an explanation for why something happened
Adaptive attribution
an explanation that links positive behaviors to internal stable causes and negative behaviors to external unstable causes
nonverbal leakage
an idea that no matter how hard we try, there are nonverbal gestures and utterances that are indicative of deceit
Language is ambiguous
attachment of meanings to symbols
how to combat attribution biases
avoid forming an explanation based on only your POV, focus on behaviors and not on personalities, protect relationships you value by making adaptive attributions
Affectionate emotions
creating attachment and closeness with others
display rules
cultural prescriptions about when, where, and how emotions should be expressed
melancholic emotions
depression, grief, loneliness
selecting
directing attention to a subset of sensory information
fundamental attribution error
effect explaining the behavior of other in terms of internal instead of external causes
actor-observer effect
explaining one's own behavior with external attribution
How intimacy affects language use
formality, idioms, pronouns
biases
fundamental attribution error, self serving biases, actor-observer
self-conscious emotions
how people might see us individually
identity
image you have of yourself that is embodied in your communication
interpersonal communication
interpersonal communication is the use of symbols to represent ideas in order to share meanings and create a personal bond between people
Nonverbal channels
kinesics (facial expressions, eye movements), haptics (touch), physical appearance, environmental factors, proxemics (personal space), paralinguistic (characteristics of the voice), chronemics (use of time), olfaction (smell).
functions of nonverbal communication
liking, power regulating conversation: establishes relationship-level meanings, nonverbal communication regulates interactions (taking, keeping, yielding, and avoiding the floor), communicates emotions, can also deceive. Playing high and playing low
maladaptive attributions
linking negative behaviors to internal and stable causes and positive behaviors to external unstable causes
self-management
manage response to emotions and behave to specific emotions
generalized others
mental representation of the combines viewpoints of all other people
Self-awareness
monitor your own emotions and correctly define them
back-channel communication
non-language utterances that show understanding and involvement in a conversation. Hand gestures, shrugs, grunts (uh-huh, uh-uh)
Ways we learn about self-concept
on our own behavior, social roles, feedback from others, social comparison
Types of rules
regulative: where, how, with who and when constitutive: what messages mean in a certain situation
hostile emotions
relates to injury or are threats to our interpersonal relationships
totalizing
resolving or neglecting details, nuances, or complexity
the process of human perception
selecting, organizing, interpreting
particular others
specific people who are significant to the self and who influence the self's values, perspectives, and esteem
Emotions and their appraisals
table 7.2
Emotions and their action tendencies
table 7.3
emotional intelligence
the ability to understand and manage one's own moods and emotions and the moods and emotions of other people
connotative meaning
the implicit emotional or evaluative interpretation of a word
Working self
the information that dominates a person's sense of self in that particular moment
denotative meaning
the literal, public, or conventional definition of a word
organizing
the process of arranging information into a coherent pattern
interpreting
the process of assigning meaning to information
Nonverbal communication as a substitute, complement, or contradiction to verbal
using nonverbal communications to convey a message. Giving a thumbs up instead of yes, using eye contact to complement a conversation, and saying your happy with a sad face would be contradicting.
identity gaps
when there is a mismatch in qualities associated with 2 or more layers of identity
Language is consequential
when we use new language to represent our reality our words inevitably highlight some aspects of that reality and neglect others
language is abstract
words stand for objects, people, ideas etc, but words are not themselves the things that they represent
relationship between language and culture
· Communication reflects cultural history, values and perspectives · Communication can change culture
how stereotyping affects perception
· people are more likely to include information that is consistent with stereotypes when they share information about others from a different culture. People prefer generalizations instead of specifics when describing behavior that is consistent with stereotypes