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18 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
artifacts
A personal object that infulences how we see ourselves and how we express our identities
haptics
Touch as form of nonverbal communication
kinesics
Facial and body movements, a type of nonverbal communication
liking
the dimension of relationship-level meaning that expresses affection or lack of affection for another
nonverbal communication
All elements of communication other than words themselves. Includes visual, vocal, environmental and physical aspects of interaction
paralanguage
Vocal cues that accompany verbal communication such as accent, volume and inflection
power
dimension of relationship-level meaning that expresses the degree to which a person is equal to, dominant over, or deferential to others.
proxemics
Space and the human use of space, including personal territories
responsiveness
The dimension of relationship-level meaning that expresses attentiveness to others and interest inwhat they say and do.
territoriality
An aspect of proxemics, the sense of personal space that one does not want others to invade.
ego boundary
Psychologically, the point at which an individual stops and the rest of the world begins. The line between yourself and others.
monitoring
The process of observing and regulating our own attitudes and behaviours
self-as-object
The ability to reflect on the self from the standpoint of others.
alternate paths model
A relationship theory according to which masculine and feminine ways of creating and expressing closeness are viewed as different from eachother and equally valued.
male deficit model
A relationship theory according to which men are deficient in forming and participating in close relationships; holds that most men's ways of experiencing and expressing closeness are not simply different from, but inferior to those of women.
personal relationships
Connections in which partners are interdependent, consider eachother irreplaceable, and are strongly and specifically connected to eachother as unique individuals
psychological responsibility
The responsibility to remember, plan, think ahead, organize, and so forth. In most hetero. relationships, women psychological responsibility for home and children.
second shift
The work of homemaking and child care performed by a member of a dual-worker family after and in-addition to that person's job in the paid labor force