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INTL 101: Social Episode
Social Episode |
interaction sequences that are repeated over and over again |
Cultural Patterns |
the shared judgments about the world is, what it should be, and the widely held expectations about how people should behave |
Social Roles |
sets of expected behaviors that are associated with people in a particular position |
Rules of interaction |
they are not written down, nor are they typically shared verbally; instead they operate at a level of unwritten, unspoken expectations |
Interaction Scenes |
made up of recurring, repetitive topics that people talk about in social conversations |
Interaction Contexts |
the settings or situations within which social episodes occur |
Magico-Religious |
The health care approach that refers to a belief that health and illness are closely linked to uncontrollable supernatural forces |
Holistic |
The health care approach that refers to belief in an essential harmonious balance between a person and nature. |
Biomedical |
The Health care approach that refers to beliefs that a person's health is controlled by biochemical forces |
Control |
Involves social dominance. |
Affiliation |
used by members of a culture to interpret the degree of friendliness, liking, social warmth, or immediacy that is being communicated
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Activation |
refers to the way people react to the world around themDia
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Dialectics |
effect the way people connect to one another
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Autonomy-connection dialectic |
refers to the extent to which individuals in an interpersonal relationship vary from a desire of separation to a feeling of attachment
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Novelty-Predictability dialectic |
refers to peoples' desire for change and stability in their interpersonal relationships
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Openness-Closedness dialectic |
refers to the person's desire to share or withhold personal information
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Face |
The public expression of one's inner self
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Informational Consequences |
the result of the additional knowledge that has been gained about the other people
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Emotional Consequences |
may include increased levels of self-disclosure, heightened interpersonal attraction, etc...
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Three general types of strategies fore reducing uncertainty and anxiety |
Passive Strategies, Active strategies, ad interactive strategies
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Self-disclosure |
sharing oneself with people from other cultures
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Breadth of Self-disclosure |
refers to the range of topics that are revealed
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Depth of Self-disclosure |
refers to the degree of "personalness" about oneself that is revealed
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Face |
The favorable social impression that a person wants others to have oh him or her.
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Three important characteristics of FACE |
Face is social, Face is an impression, and Face is favorable
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Face is social... |
meaning that face is not what an individual thinks of himself or herself but rather how that person wants others to regard his or her worth.
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Face is an impression... |
may or may not be shared by all and may differ from a person's self image. people's claims for face, therefore, are not requests to know what others actually think about them; instead they are solicitations from others of favorable expressions about them.
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Face is favorable... |
face only refers to the favorable social attributes that people want others to acknowledge.
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Control face |
is concerned with individual requirements for freedom and personal authority
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Approval Face |
is concerned with individual requirements for affiliation and social contact.
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Admiration Face |
concerned with individual needs for displays of respect from others.
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Facework |
refers to the actions people take to deal with their own and others face needs.
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Uncertainty |
refers to the extent to which a person lacks the knowledge, information, and ability to understand and predict the intentions and behaviors of another.
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Anxiety |
refers to an individual's degree of emotional tension and her or his inability to cope with change, to live with stress, and to contend with vague and imprecise information.
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Emblems |
no |