Sounds used to fill space or cover pauses.
What is vocal fillers?
Communication with spoken or written words.
What is verbal communication?
The person who receives a message.
What is the receiver?
This percentage of communication is nonverbal.
What is 93%?
This level of Maslow's Hierarchy is most important to basic survival.
What are physiological needs?
Used to accent or emphasize words.
What are illustrators?
The "what" that is being communicated.
What is message?
Where the communication takes place.
What is setting?
Space generally less than 18 inches apart.
What is intimate space?
What is esteem needs?
Conventualized responses.
What is ritual language?
What is strategic flexibility?
Communication that occurs at the same time with no delay.
What is synchronous?
Habitual language of a community.
What is dialect?
What are safety needs?
What is denotation?
A trait in this quadrant of the Johari Window will never be written down on the model.
What is unknown area?
Communication that occurs one-on-one, usually in an informal, unstructured setting.
What is interpersonal communication?
What is proximity?
Achieving your personal potential is found on this level of Maslow's Hierarchy.
What is self-actualization?
The way in which words are spoken.
What is paralanguage?
This type of barrier can arise the sender and receiver do not share a common language.
What is language barrier?
This is an example of what type of noise.
"Uhhhhh, what's she saying? I'm so hungry I can't think about anything but lunch."
What is internal noise?
What are ellective characteristics?
There are this many levels of Maslow's Hierarchy of needs.
What is 5 levels?