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Peer reviewedStephens, Mitchell – Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, 1998
Belongs to a series of papers from a panel discussion on "The Future of the Internet: A Historical Perspective" examining how scholars understand and explain the Internet. Draws four lessons from two earlier "communication revolutions" (writing and the printing press) and applies them to our age of television, computers, and the Internet. (SR)
Descriptors: Communication Research, Futures (of Society), Internet, Technological Advancement
Peer reviewedGraham, Elizabeth E. – Communication Monographs, 1997
Identifies turning points, reported commitment level, and patterns characteristic of post-divorce relationships. Identifies 11 turning points, assesses mean change in commitment level, and finds five patterns of post-divorce relationships: gradual relational progress; disrupted progress; sustained adjustment; disjointed erratic cycle; and eventual…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Divorce, Interpersonal Relationship, Parents
Peer reviewedMacDonald, J. Renee; MacIntyre, Peter D. – Communication Education, 1998
Finds that students with the highest level of public speaking anxiety showed the largest improvement in perceived competence and perception of audience pleasantness. Discusses the speaker's perception of the audience as a key factor in public speaking anxiety. (SR)
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Public Speaking
Peer reviewedLevine, Timothy R.; Wheeless, Lawrence R. – Communication Research Reports, 1997
Examines impact of variations in perceived intimacy on subjects' responses to a reasonably comprehensive list of compliance-gaining tactics. Questions 544 undergraduate students using an experimental recall method. Shows that situational variation in intimacy is associated with significant, nontrivial cross-situational differences in tactic…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Higher Education, Interpersonal Communication, Intimacy
Peer reviewedNeuliep, James W.; McCroskey, James C. – Communication Research Reports, 1997
Develops two scales based on the conceptualization of intercultural communication apprehension as the fear or anxiety associated with either real or anticipated interaction with people of different groups. States scales consisted of 16 items administered to 396 undergraduate student participants. Reveals a unidimensional factor structure and high…
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Factor Analysis, Intercultural Communication
Peer reviewedGayle, Barbara Mae; Preiss, Raymond W. – Management Communication Quarterly, 1998
Reports on 174 employees' and supervisors' memories of a conflict. Indicates that the emotional nature of the recollected narratives increased if the conflicts were perceived as unresolved, remembered as an ongoing series of events, or discussed with the other persons involved in the exchanges. Discusses ways recollected emotional narratives may…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Conflict, Emotional Response, Memory
Peer reviewedTurner, Lynn H.; And Others – Communication Reports, 1995
Finds that women use more justifiers, intensifiers, and agreement, whereas men exhibit more vocalized pauses and also receive more vocalized pauses; conversations of mixed-sex dyads contain more overlaps and, marginally, more interruptions than conversations of same-sex dyads; but that interruptions and overlaps were not performed more frequently…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Higher Education, Interpersonal Communication, Sex Differences
Peer reviewedLang, Annie; And Others – Communication Reports, 1995
Finds that elaborated audio narrative structure increased resources allocated to a message and memory for the message; increased video narrative structure did not influence resource allocation but did increase memory; and messages were recalled in narrative form regardless of the narrative structure of the message. (SR)
Descriptors: Communication Research, Higher Education, Memory, Narration
Peer reviewedBraithwaite, Dawn O. – Communication Reports, 1995
Finds that women embarrassed men at "coed" wedding and baby showers by teasing and causing them to look unpoised, and that men used avoidance, humor, remediation, and justification strategies. Adds a new strategy, compliance, to previous frameworks to explain males' reaction to embarrassment. Discusses the importance of context and…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Higher Education, Interpersonal Communication, Sex Differences
Peer reviewedMonahan, Jennifer L. – Communication Monographs, 1995
Investigates why conversational participants view their partner more positively than do conversation observers. Focuses on self-presentation concerns and cognitive load. Finds that cognitive load and self-presentation concerns both influenced evaluators to be more positive in their social judgments, but were distinctive in that self-presentation…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education, Interpersonal Communication
Peer reviewedBaldassare, Mark; Katz, Cheryl – Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, 1996
Shows that those with greater interest in politics, those who have extreme political views, and those who have paid attention to the election are more willing to be interviewed by a news reporter after a pre-election survey. Concludes that attitude strength plays a significant role in predicting willingness to express political views. (SR)
Descriptors: Communication Research, Higher Education, Mass Media, Political Attitudes
Peer reviewedJacobs, Scott; And Others – Communication Monographs, 1996
Replicates S. McCornack's 1992 study with the inclusion of explicit checks to determine the covertness of the purported deceptive messages and to check manipulation of information type. Finds that none of the results are consistent with information manipulation theory predictions, but that instead, the results uniformly support a model of…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Deception, Higher Education, Interpersonal Communication
Peer reviewedMcCornack, Steven A.; And Others – Communication Monographs, 1996
Examines critically two articles in the same issue addressing deceptive messages. Shows one article's data to be inconsistent with the premise that deception derives solely from erroneous "Quality" implicatures. Argues that the conceptual definitions in the other article lack precision and that the proposed set of information dimensions…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Deception, Higher Education, Interpersonal Communication
Peer reviewedBuller, David B.; Burgoon, Judee K. – Communication Monographs, 1996
Responds to an article appearing in this issue, that critically examines an article (also appearing in this issue) by these authors. Considers how the information management concept in Interpersonal Deception theory is related to Information Management Theory (called Information Manipulation Theory in earlier articles) and addresses criticisms of…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Deception, Higher Education, Interpersonal Communication
Peer reviewedJacobs, Scott; And Others – Communication Monographs, 1996
Responds to an article in the same issue critically examining a first article by these authors. Discusses conceptualizing deception, and discusses the two empirical objections raised regarding the authors' implicature model. Argues that IMT (Information Manipulation Theory) lacks any credible empirical support. (SR)
Descriptors: Communication Research, Deception, Higher Education, Interpersonal Communication


