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PERCEPTION AND THE SELF IN INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION - Coggle Diagram
PERCEPTION AND THE SELF IN INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION
THE SELF IN INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION
Self concept
consists of your strengths, weakness, your abilities and limitations, and your aspirations and worldview
develops from 4 sources :
other's image
social comparisons
cultural teachings
self-evaluations
Self-Awareness
the open self
the blind self
the hidden self
the unknown self
GROWING IN SELF-AWARENESS
ask yourself about yourself
listen to others
actively seek information about yourself
see your different selves
increase your open self
SELF-ESTEEM
is a measure of how valuable you think you are
attack self-destructive beliefs
seek out nourishing people
work on projects that will result in success
remind yourself of your success
secure affirmation
PERCEPTION IN INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION
is the process by which you become aware of objects, events and especially people through your sense sight, smell, taste, touch and hearing.
INTERPERSONAL PERCEPTION STAGES
Stage one : stimulation
your sense organs are stimulated
Stage two : organization
one frequently used rule is that of proximity or physical closeness
by schemata
by scripts
Stage three : interpretation-evaluation
greatly influenced by your experiences, needs, wants, value, etc.
Stage four : memory
all the perceptions and interpretation-evaluation are put into memory
may ultimately retrieve at some later time
Stage five : recall
involves accessing the information you have stored in memory
IMPRESSION FORMATION PROCESS
impression formation consists of a variety of processes that you go through in forming an impression of another person.
self-fulfilling prophecy
implicit personality theory
perceptual accentuation
primary-recency
consistency
attribution of control
self-fulfilling prophecy
implicit personality theory
halo effect
horns effect
perceptual accentuation
primary-recency
consistency
attribution of control