This describes awareness and understanding of one’s own thought processes.
What is meta-cognition?
When the receiver states what they perceive the meaning of the message to be and then asks the sender if they perceived that meaning, this process is occurring.
What is negotiating for meaning?
One way to create safe spaces is by calling people __, not out.
What is "in?"
These are internal reactions to our experiences.
What are feelings?
What is confirmation bias?
What is self-awareness?
This law says that positive perceptions of and feelings toward another person are hard to acquire
but easy to lose, but negative perceptions of and feelings toward another person are
easy to acquire and hard to lose.
What is the Crude Law of Relationships?
___ and ___ are 2 of Lancaster's six steps to a compelling speech.
Our ___ regions provide the most diagnostic evidence for identifying fear, anger and sadness
What is "eye?"
When Naomi is late for dinner with Isabella, she feels bad for making Isabella wait but doesn't blame herself because traffic was really bad. When Isabella is late to the Taylor Swift concert a month later, Naomi is confident that it's because Isabella has bad time management skills. Naomi is making this mistake.
What is the Fundamental Attribution Error?
This is the level of specificity that characterizes verbal representations of an affective experience
What is emotional granularity?
These people have have internalized the love, support, and acceptance of others so you can apply
values and principles flexibly.
Who are autonomous people?
Winters defines this term as "Empathetic openness and the ability to integrate opposing perspectives and models in dialogue."
What is multipartiality?
Abby wrote a letter to her friend. Was this an example of nonverbal communication?
No
DeMar knows that texting while driving is dangerous, but he does it anyway. This probably makes him feel ___ ___.
What is cognitive dissonance?
___ and ___ are two of Hofstede's six cultural dimensions.
What are Masculinity vs. femininity, Indulgence vs. restraint, Individualism vs. collectivism, Long-Term Orientation, Power Distance, and Uncertainty Avoidance?
These are the two kinds of interpersonal trust in friendships.
What are reliability and emotional trust?
Two characteristics of brave, psychologically safe spaces are ___.
-place to be brave and not fear retribution
-place to push boundaries of political correctness and small talk
-place where people might feel some discomfort, anxiety, ambiguity, and discord as opposing perspectives are shared
-place that allows for surfacing and sharing of each other’s deep truths
These gestures provide comfort in uncomfortable situations, such as touching your neck or biting your nails
What are pacifying gestures?
This is the desire to have others perceive us as we genuinely perceive ourselves.
What is self-verification?
These are the Big 5 personality traits.
What are openness to experience, conscientiousness, extroversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism?
This hyphenated term describes acts that are motivated by the desire to get along and be liked.
What is self-ingratiation?
These are the three types/genres of civic rhetoric identified by Aristotle.
What are forensic (aka judicial), epideictic (aka ceremonial), and deliberative (aka political)?
When we receive contradictory communication (mismatch between channels), this is called a ___.
What is a double bind?
These are two of the five ways of listening and responding