Communication Basics
Types of Communication
Relationship Development and Attraction
NVC Process and Empathy
Speech Process and Persuasion
100

Customs, art, and norms of a group of people

culture

100

Words spoken out loud

Verbal or Oral Communication

100

Events that change the trajectory of a relationship

Turning Points

100

This stage of the NVC process involves asking the other person to act or think differently in the future

Requests

100

um and like are common examples of this

filler words

200

Where and when the communication takes place

communication context

200

Tone, pitch, body language, facial expressions

Nonverbal communication

200

When you are drawn to someone based on their personality traits

Social Attraction

200

"At least" statements are used in what harmful process

Sympathy

200

This is the first thing out of your mouth when presenting a speech

hook

300

Communication model that involves feedback

Transactional model of communication

300

Otherwise known as self talk

Intrapersonal Communication

300

In the Social Penetration Theory, people can grow more and more intimate by increasing these two things

depth and breadth of self disclosure

300

This is the context in which the NVC process is used

conflict

300

statistics, testimonials, personal stories, and research findings are all forms of this

supporting material

400

Having a song stuck in our heads, stress about assignments, or negative self talk would all be considered this type of noise

Psychological or internal noise

400

Eye movements as part of nonverbal communication

ocalics

400

Being drawn to someone because you think they would be an asset to completing a goal or project

Task Attraction

400

"Misunderstood" and "betrayed" are bad examples of this

Feelings

400

Crafting your argument to appeal to the other person's morals and values

Moral Reframing

500

The category of noise that a language barrier would fall into

Semantic noise

500

This happens when your thoughts and beliefs don't align with your actions

Cognitive dissonance

500

Assessing risks and rewards for each relationship before deciding to proceed is a part of this theory

Social Exchange Theory

500

Instead of jumping to conclusions about someone's actions, we should...

be curious, ask questions

500

The element of Monroe's Motivated Sequence that involves solving the problem introduced in the previous section

Satisfaction

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