Getting consistent results is an example of this in research methods
What is reliability?
How strong you are at reading other peoples' emotions
What is nonverbal receiving accuracy?
This is defined as the process of interpreting the sensory experiences of the world
What is perception?
Emphasizing different words to get different meanings is an example of this type of nonverbal communication.
What is paralanguage?
Dealing with a breakup while trying to listen to Professor Stifano's lecture is an example of this barrier to listening
What is psychological?
Getting accurate results is an example of this in research methods
What is validity?
Lying to yourself or to others
What is deception?
Example: I think I'm running late because my alarm didn't go off, but I think you're running late because you're lazy.
What is attribution bias?
The use of objects, action, sounds, time, and space to convey meaning.
What is nonverbal communication?
When we hear a person talking to us without really listening, we are doing this
What is pseudo-listening?
When we manipulate something, we are using this kind of research design
What is experimental research?
Intentional behavior that tries to replicate spontaneous behavior (e.g. when we show certain facial expressions on Zoom because we think it's what we're supposed to do)
What is Pseudo-spontaneous Communication?
When we base our sense of self on what we think others think of us.
What is the looking glass self?
The process of changing what you say and how you say it when you're around different groups
What is codeswitching?
The physiological process that picks up noise and refers it to your brain
What is hearing?
Collect data that are rich in detail and description through in-depth interview, ethnography, participant obsevation.
What is qualitative research?
The process of knowing where emotions come from, in the self and in others
What is emotional education?
We tend to emphasize first impressions over later impressions
What is the primary effect?
'I'll be home early' is an example of this kind of language.
What is ambiguous language?
Group related items together to visually establish relationship
What is the design proximity?
The type of communication between 3 or more people in a group
What is small group communication?
Six emotions: Happy, sad, fear, anger, surprise, disgust
What is the six primary effects?
When we choose what (and what not) to pay attention to, filtering out some information, because we can only process so much at a given time.
What is selective attention?
"Um, like, uh" are all examples of this type of language.
What is powerless language?
The design principle that promotes consistency by duplicating an element multiple times.
What is repetition?