Interpersonal Communication - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 19
About This Presentation
Title:

Interpersonal Communication

Description:

.set of interrelated propositions that stipulate relationships among theoretical ... communication postulated to be reciprocally related to uncertainty and this, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:43
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 20
Provided by: Owne1156
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Interpersonal Communication


1
Interpersonal Communication
  • Theoretical Perspectives
  • Part I II
  • Berger (2005)

2
Theory Explication
  • Theory
  • ..set of interrelated propositions that
    stipulate relationships among theoretical
    constructs and an account of the mechanisms that
    explain the relationships stipulated in the
    propositions (p. 417)
  • Theories
  • Provide explanations for the observed
    regularities
  • Date without theory ? babies without parents ?
    low life expectancy
  • Better to have theorized and lost then never to
    have theorized at all

3
Organization of the Theoretical Review
  • Possible to organize theoretical activity within
    the interpersonal communication domain into at
    lest six distinct areas
  • Interpersonal Adaptation
  • Verbal and nonverbal adjustments and adaptations
    that individuals make during f-t-f interaction
  • Message Production
  • Uncertainty Reduction
  • Deceptive Communication
  • Dialectical Theories
  • Mediated Social Interaction

4
Interpersonal Adaptation Theories
  • Originated outside the communication field
  • Social interaction governed by the norm of
    reciprocity (Gouldner, 1960 Jourard, 1971)
  • Equilibrium theory or Affiliative Conflict theory
    individuals seek to balance autonomy and
    affiliative needs during interaction when
    equilibrium is disrupted, it produces anxiety and
    individuals engage in behaviors aimed at
    restoring balance (Argyle Dean, 1965)
  • Speech (Communication) Accommodation theory
    individuals tend to alter such attributes of
    speech as dialect and accent in their direction
    of their partners speech style (Giles
    Powesland, 1975)
  • Convergent vs. Divergent speech accommodation

5
Interpersonal Adaptation Theories
  • From a communication perspective
  • Researchers sought to explicate the conditions
    under which reciprocity and compensation are
    likely to occur during social interaction
  • Exemplars of adaptation theories that accorded
    arousal a central role in determining which
    interaction pattern would occur
  • Proximic (Expectancy) violations theory
  • Arousal labeling theory
  • Discrepancy arousal theory
  • Cognitive valence theory
  • INTERACTION ADAPTATION THEORY formulated to
    overcome some of the limitations of these other
    theories

6
Interaction Adaptation Theory
  • Premised on several principles (p. 419)
  • Biological pressures to adapt social interaction
    patterns desire to mesh and show interaction
    synchrony
  • Social pressures toward behavioral reciprocity
    and matching
  • Both reciprocity and compensation at the level of
    communication
  • Theory postulates
  • Cyclical variations in approach and avoidance
    drives also determine whether interaction
    participants will show patterns of reciprocity or
    compensation
  • Theory identifies 3 sets of factor that are
    important determinants of individuals
    interaction expectations
  • R Required factors are related to individuals
    basic needs and drives
  • E Expectations reflect individual cognitive
    representation or social norms, social
    prescriptions, individuated knowledge about the
    others behaviors as well as functions or goals
    germane to the current situation
  • D Desired level of the behaviors includes
    individuals personal goals and preferences

7
Interaction Adaptation Theory - Continued
  • The RED factors combine to determine the
    interaction position (IP) construct
  • IP overall assessment of what the individual
    needs, anticipates and prefers as the interaction
    pattern in particular situations
  • IP and A (actual behavior of interaction partner)
    together determine patterns of interaction
    adaptation
  • If IP and A match or are within a tolerable
    range matching or reciprocity will likely occur
  • Large IP-A discrepancies potentiate behavioral
    change, cognitive change or both
  • When individuals receive more of the behavior
    they want, they are more likely to move in the
    direction of their partner
  • When individuals receive less than the
    expectations implicated in their IP
    compensation ensues

8
Message Production Theories (MPT)
  • MPT concerned with the relationship between
    individuals cognitive complexity and their
    message production abilities
  • Exemplars
  • Constructivism
  • Argued that individuals whose constructs for
    construing other people are more differentiated,
    integrated, and abstract are better able to
    generate listener-adapted messages and are thus
    better able to achieve their interaction goals
    than are their less cognitively complex
    counterparts (p. 420)
  • Comforting research
  • Person-centered communication
  • Message design logics

9
Action Assembly Theory (AAT)
  • Goals of AAT
  • Specification of the mechanisms by which
    individuals produce verbal and nonverbal
    behavioral outputs during their interactions
  • Provision of a unique perspective on social
    interaction skills
  • Theorys fundamental structural unit procedural
    record (PR)
  • PR long-term memory associative network
    consisting of nodes that represent features of
    actions, outcomes, and situations nodes linked
    by associative pathways
  • PR activated and assembled to form coherent
    output representations of the action to be taken
  • Action assembly both top-down and bottom-up

10
Other Message Production Theories
  • Memory Organization Packets
  • MOP - organizes scenes in the stream of discourse
  • Scenes generalized cognitive representations of
    goal-directed action sequences that share
    features across contexts (e.g. greetings and
    goodbyes)
  • Contextual variations accounted for by specific
    scripts attached to scenes (e.g. airport goodbye
    scene vs. goodbye scene at ones residence)
  • Plans and Planning theories
  • Plans
  • Hierarchical cognitive representations of
    goal-directed action sequences
  • May be formulated as social interaction episodes
    unfold, or plans successfully used in past
    episodes, or those canned and saved in long-term
    memory
  • The hierarchy principle suggests that individuals
    are more likely to alter concrete rather than
    abstract plan features because they require less
    cognitive effort
  • Individuals whose interaction plans are more
    complex, more concrete, and look further ahead in
    the conversation are more likely to achieve their
    interaction goals that are less complex

11
Uncertainty Theories
  • Interactions involve certain amount of
    uncertainty
  • Uncertainty may be subjectively experience or
    unconscious
  • Uncertainty Reduction Theory (URT) explains
    recurring interaction patterns observed during
    initial encounters
  • URT proposed 7 axioms from which 21 theorems
    were devised
  • Amounts of verbal and nonverbal communication
    postulated to be reciprocally related to
    uncertainty and this, in turn, was related to
    such variables as intimacy of self-disclosures,
    attraction, and information-seeking
  • Reward value of conversational partners, degree
    to which their behavior conformed to normative
    expectations, and the probability of future
    interaction later stipulated as conditions
    prompting concern for reducing uncertainty

12
URT - Continued
  • URT motivated research concerning the active,
    passive, and/or interactive strategies
    individuals use to obtain information from others
  • Alternate versions of the theory provide some
    credibility in terms of explaining certain
    aspects of intercultural encounters, social
    support, and organizational behavior
  • Uncertainty management theory (UMT), on the other
    hand, argues that individuals may experience
    uncertainty in different ways, and under certain
    circumstances, they may seek to increase, rather
    than reduce, their uncertainty (e.g. health exam
    results)

13
Deception Theories
  • Deception
  • integral to the conduct of everyday social
    encounters (e.g. to maintain face)
  • during everyday social encounters frequent
    successful
  • Early research focused on deception detection
    and degree to which behaviors of deceivers
    differed from that of non-deceivers
  • Results of such research suggested that
  • Individuals are not particularly good at
    detecting deception
  • No one non-verbal cue is likely to be a reliable
    indicator of deception across situations
  • Exemplars
  • Information manipulation Interpersonal
    deception theories

14
Information Manipulation Theory
  • According to the theory, information can be
    manipulated along the dimensions of quantity,
    quality, relevance, and manner to produce
    misleading messages
  • Verbal messages that satisfy the four maxims can
    also be deceptive depending on the nonverbals
    accompanying the message e.g. sarcasm
  • In response to questions raised about the
    theorys status, McCornack, the creator of the
    theory, claimed that IMT is not actually a
    theory at all because it does not provide any
    testable propositions or falsifiable hypotheses

15
Interpersonal Deception Theory
  • Eighteen propositions included in the theory
    intended to explain intentional acts of deception
    rather than unintended lies
  • Theory predicated on a number of postulates,
    including
  • the truth bias
  • the idea that deceptive messages usually involve
  • a central deceptive message that is verbal
  • verbal and nonverbal cues designed to lend
    credibility to the deceptive message
  • leakage (inadvertent nonverbal cues)
  • the enactment and detection of deception place
    greater demand on cognitive resources than would
    be expected in non-deceptive situations

16
Dialectical Perspectives
  • Relational dialectics
  • Dialectics meta-theoretical perspectives that
    describes a small set of conceptual assumptions
    (Baxter Montgomery, 1996, p. 6)
  • These assumptions include
  • Contradiction
  • Unity of oppositions (e.g. autonomy vs.
    connection)
  • Change
  • Interplay of oppositions results in relationships
    being in a constant state of flux change is
    constant
  • Praxis
  • Individuals prior choices constrain their future
    choices
  • Totality
  • Embodies the notion that a given phenomenon can
    only be understood by their relationships with
    other phenomena

17
Communication Privacy Management Theory
  • Seeks to explain the regulation and control of
    disclosure of private information
  • Acts of self-disclosure predicated on a
    rule-based management system aids decisions
    about the way privacy boundaries are regulated
  • Theory postulates that
  • Individuals assume that they own or co-own
    private information with others and revealing
    that information may lead to feelings of
    vulnerability
  • As a result,, control over boundaries is critical
    and rule management processes serve to regulate
    the revelation versus concealment of private
    information
  • Of particular relevance to researchers interested
    in health communication (e.g. sharing health
    status info with patients, family members, and
    health care professionals)

18
Mediated Social Interaction
  • Two lines of research that have developed within
    the domain of computer-mediated-communication are
    particularly germane to interpersonal
    communication researchers
  • The first of these lines of inquiry concerns the
    potential deleterious effects of the new
    technologys use
  • Internet addiction
  • Internet use and social isolation/loneliness
  • Escapism and alienation
  • The second research area of interest to
    interpersonal communication researchers involves
    FtF interaction as a kind of gold standard
    against which to compare CMC
  • Extent to which loss of nonverbal cues in
    text-based CMC influences a variety of outcomes

19
Social Information Processing Theory (SIPT)
  • Devised in an effort to explain differences in
    the effects that might or might not be produced
    FtF and text-based CMC (Walther, 1992)
  • Theory predicted
  • When CMC groups were allowed more time during
    which to communicate, the differences between FtF
    and CMC in terms of the relative amounts of
    task-related vs. socio-emotional communication
    would tend to disappear
  • Walther argued that CMC may be not as efficient
    as FtF, in general, but it might be as effective
    when time pressures are minimal
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com