Term
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Definition
| face-to-face, texting, phone conversation or ect. (auditory and visual or just auditory or just visual) |
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Term
| Common Listening Misunderstandings |
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Definition
1.) Listening is the same as hearing. 2.) Listening competency develops naturally through daily practice. 3.) Listening ability is largely dependent upon intellegence. 4.)Listening and reading are the same process. 5.)Listening is a passive act. 6.)Effective communication is the responsibility of the speaker. 7.)Listening means agreement or obedience. 8.) Actual listening is equated with perceived listening. |
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Term
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Definition
| sensory register, short-term memory, long-term memory. |
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Term
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Definition
| The emotional meaning (swearing bothers some people) |
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Term
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Definition
| the measurement of the preassure the sound wves exert on serfaces. Normal Range: 60 |
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Term
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Definition
| The dictionary meaning (chair is a chair) |
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Term
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Definition
| when the source sorts and selects symboles to translate the idea into a message. |
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Term
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Definition
| Attention requires both effort and desire. We can divide our attention or we can give complete attention to only one stimulus.If we espend too much energy on too many stimuli, we will no longer be attending. |
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Term
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Definition
| the attitudes, knowledge, and communication skills of communicators, both speaker and listener,contribute to the ______. The _______ consists of background, life experiences, social-cultural context, and everything else that makes and individual unique. |
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Term
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Definition
| the measurement of the number of times a sound wave vibratres in a second. normal rang: 400-4000 |
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Term
| Kahnemans' Attention Model |
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Definition
1.)Automatic, unconscious rules. 2.)conscious decisions. 3.)the difficulty of the mental task |
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Term
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Definition
1.)Listening 2.)Speaking 3.)Reading 4.)Writing |
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Term
| Linear Communication Model |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
| The existence of background noise or other types of interference while the individual is attmpthing to hear the intended oral message. |
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Term
| Multistore Theory of Memory |
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Definition
| theory that human memory consists of two or three functionally separate and distinct structural components or stores: sensory register, short-term memory, and long-term memory. |
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Term
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Definition
| the non-verbal components of communication |
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Term
| Parent and Child Communications Rates |
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Definition
Working mothers: 11mins weekdays 30mins weekends Homemaking mothers: 30mins weekday 36mins weekend Fathers: 8mins weekdays 14mins weekends |
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Term
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Definition
| fake listening. pretending to listen. |
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Term
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Definition
| the theory that is based on the concept that we all carry schemata-mental representation of knowledge- in ourbrains. these organized information structures consist of nodes (concepts, events, objects) and links (relationships of the nodes). New information is first run through existing schemata or scripts and then interpredted. |
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Term
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Definition
| the process of selecting only those stimuli to which we will attend to, allowing in too much stimuli creates an overload. |
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Term
| Simple Communication Model |
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Definition
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Term
| Speech/Thought Differntial |
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Definition
| our brain thinks faster than our mouths can encode what we are thinking. |
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Term
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Definition
(picture) pinna, auditory canal, tympanic membrane, malleuse, incus, stapes, oval window,cochlear duct, Cochlea, Semicircular canals, utricle, saccule, auditory nerve, eustachian tube. |
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Term
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Definition
(picture) Cornea, aqueous homor/anterior chamber, iris, lens, vitreous humor, retina, optic nerve. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
| Transactional Communication Model |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
| External, internal physical and internal psychological. |
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Term
| Variables in the Communication Process |
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Definition
| Communication skills, communication knowledge, communication attitudes,frame of reference, message context and structure, language code and symbolism, channel selection and environment. |
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Term
| Wolvin-Coakley listening definition |
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Definition
| The process of receiving, attending to, and assigning meaning to aural and visual stimuli. |
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Term
| Wolvin Coakley Listening Model |
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Definition
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