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25 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Primary
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control, ownership
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Secondary
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more public, ex. tavern, favorite table
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Public
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space you temporarily occupy
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Brown
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-houses robbed had less territorial displays than those not robbed
~personalization |
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Altman
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-3 types of territories: primary, secondary, public
-privacy: access to self: visual, auditory, informational |
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Veblen
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conspicuus consumption
~material display of upper classes ~dominance |
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Behavioral Range
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the number of behavior settings a person enters in one year
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Home Range
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area an animal occupies in a year or lifetime
-can be defended, hunting or grazing terrioty |
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Arena
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to build or occupy area &/or display to attracy mates
-not further defended |
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Sommer (Territory)
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-territory is a fixed, geographic space, separate from personal space, both may be defended when invaded
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Noyau
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-congregating at the periphery
(boundary for animals) |
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Argyle & Dean
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-Equilibrium: personal space maintained by eye contact, facial expression, distance, and verbal behavior
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Higashiyama & Ono
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-control distance between speaker & listener
koko: near the speaker soko: near listener & outer boundary of koko |
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Hediger
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-wild animals, hunted & captivity
-flight distance up when shot at; 2 zones an approaching figure crossed: 1. alert 2. choose to flee or charge |
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Sommer (Space)
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-personal space: bubble
-invading personal space; bench until they fled -seating at a table; dominance over space |
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Sensory Zones
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-intimate: 0-18in
-personal: 18in-4ft -social: 4ft-12ft -public: 12ft-25ft |
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Stop-Distance Method
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-subject approaches a target until the target person registers discomfort
-Hayduk |
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Finighan
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found values of privacy to be similar regardless of family stage or income
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Smith & Knowles
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invader is rated negatively & then specific intentions are attributed to him or her
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Goldsmith & Hill
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-family's home space affects behavior: home size, number and age of kids, traumatic events
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Kinesics
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study of body language; like the punctuation in a sentence
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Thompson et al
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intermediate distances seem more comfortable while nearest & farthest produce most of the discomfort
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Sussman & Rosenfeld
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-bilingual effects on social distance
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Latane & Nida
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best chance of help when there is only 1 other person there
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Attribution Theory
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what one person thinks the other person's motive is
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