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Zagacki, Kenneth S.; And Others – Communication Quarterly, 1992
Investigates how mode of imagery affects imagined interactions and the relationship between affective processing and imagined interaction. Shows that (1) verbal imagery is associated with self-dominance, rehearsal, and understanding whereas visual imagery is associated with more pleasantness; and (2) pleasant imagined interactions are lower in…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Emotional Response, Higher Education, Visualization
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Hopf, Tim; And Others – Communication Reports, 1994
Finds that people with communication apprehension (CA) who were exposed to visualization reported lower trait and state CA as well as higher attraction levels than those in control or placebo conditions. (SR)
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Higher Education, Visualization
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Ayres, Joe; And Others – Communication Education, 1994
Finds that performance visualization is more effective in reducing communication anxiety, state communication anxiety, negative thoughts, and rigidity for people who can create vivid mental images than for those whose images are less vivid. (SR)
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Higher Education, Speech Communication
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Ayres, Joe; Hopf, Tim – Communication Reports, 1992
Determines whether visualization can enhance students' public speaking performance and reduce speech anxiety. Finds that standard visualization and performance visualization reduce negative thinking, state communication anxiety (CA), and trait CA. Finds that performance visualization results in fewer disfluencies, less rigidity, and less…
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Higher Education, Public Speaking
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Ayres, Joe – Communication Reports, 1995
Compares guided visualization (involving guided imagery) with self-constructed imagery (involving developing one's own visualization script). Finds no differences between guided visualization and self-constructed visualization in terms of reducing communication apprehension or negative thinking, but finds both procedures superior to no treatment…
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Higher Education, Public Speaking
Wongprasert, Tanichya K.; Ayres, Joe – 2000
The present study was designed to test the effectiveness of performance visualization in reducing communication apprehension (CA) in employment interviews. Literature on CA and its relationship to employment interviews is reviewed. Causes of CA and available interventions are also discussed. The study employed a pre/posttest control group…
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Employment Interviews, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Woodall, W. Gill; Folger, Joseph P. – Communication Monographs, 1981
Reports two studies demonstrating the ability of nonverbal contextual cues to act as retrieval mechanisms for co-occurring language. Suggests that visual contextual cues, such as speech primacy and motor primacy gestures, can access linguistic target information. Motor primacy cues are shown to act as stronger retrieval cues. (JMF)
Descriptors: College Students, Communication Research, Context Clues, Cues
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Ayres, Joe; Hopf, Theodore S. – Communication Education, 1990
Compares communication apprehension (CA) levels of people exposed or not exposed to visualization (a desensitization technique to assist people in coping with CA) after four months and after eight months. Finds that those exposed to visualization reported significantly lower CA levels at the end of both time periods than those not exposed to…
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Higher Education, Speech Communication
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Ayres, Joe; Hopf, Theodore S. – Communication Education, 1989
Examines how visualization compares with placebo procedures in reducing communication apprehension (CA) in public speaking classes. Finds that visualization is an active treatment procedure that reduces CA above and beyond the reduction that can be attributed to the "extra-attention" involved in any treatment process. (MS)
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Higher Education, Intervention
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Ayres, Joe – Communication Education, 1988
Reports two studies probing the link between speech anxiety and positive thinking. Finds that there is a correlation between communication anxiety and positive and negative thoughts; and the use of visualization lowered self-reported speech anxiety and increased the proportion of positive to negative thoughts. (MS)
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Higher Education, Negative Attitudes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Ayres, Joe; Hopf, Theodore S. – Communication Education, 1985
Offers evidence that visualization is an effective device to help students reduce their anxiety. (Defines visualization as asking speakers to imagine themselves making an effective presentation.) (PD)
Descriptors: Anxiety, College Students, Communication Apprehension, Communication Research
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Ayers, Joe; Hopf, Theodore S. – Communication Education, 1987
Compares the effectiveness of systematic desensitization (SD), rational emotive therapy (RET), and visualization (VIS) in reducing communication apprehension (CA). Concludes that, while all treatment modes reduce CA, no significant differences were found in their effectiveness. Emphasizes that VIS is a relatively simple technique that can be used…
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Communication Problems, Communication Research, Comparative Analysis
Nimocks, Mittie J.; Bromley, Patricia L.; Parsons, Theron E.; Enright, Corinne S.; Gates, Elizabeth A. – 2001
This study examined the effect of covert modeling on communication apprehension, public speaking anxiety, and communication competence. Students identified as highly communication apprehensive received covert modeling, a technique in which one first observes a model doing a behavior, then visualizes oneself performing the behavior and obtaining a…
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Communication Skills, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Whitworth, Randolph H.; Cochran, Claudia – Communication Education, 1996
Tested public speaking anxiety of university students at the beginning and end of the semester. Treated one group with skills training, visualization, and Communication-Orientation therapy; another received skills training and visualization; another received only skills training; fourth group served as control. Found that the 2 groups receiving…
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Comparative Analysis, Higher Education
Moriyama, Masaki; Harnisch, Delwyn L. – 1992
Based in a stream of community-based health promotion activities rather than a fixed framework of hypothesis testing, the study described in this paper tried to solve the problem of the one-sided communication between Japanese health care providers and receivers by visualizing health-related feelings and concepts for both parties involved in the…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Community Education, Foreign Countries, Health Personnel
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