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