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Interpersonal Communication Interpersonal Communication “ to speak, you have to address another or others. People in their right minds do not stray through the woods just talking at random to nobody. Even to talk to yourself you have to pretend that you are two people.” -Walter Ong Interpersonal Communication Introduction: Our human senses provides us with data from our environment. Within that data we discover patterns which evoke in our minds concepts that are given meaning in part by our personal experiences (schema) and in part by the social conventions of the groups in which we live. Interpersonal Communication Intro continued While it is true that it is by means of communication that humans express their inner selves, it is equally true that humans are only able to express themselves within the context of the societies in which they live. Similarly, while it is true that it is the social context that gives meaning to the thoughts, emotions, and ideas of the individual members, it is equally true that human communication is the process that establishes and defines human societies. Interpersonal Communication Intro continued However, scholars who try to move further in either of these two directions – towards the self, or towards society – find out that they cannot. At least not AND study communication If the focus of study is internal, individual and private then it is beyond the study of communication and into the realm of psychology, cognitive studies, or biology If the focus of study is external, available, and social then it is beyond the study of communication and into the realm of sociology, political science, economics, etc. Communication is an activity whose source is found in the thoughts and actions of individual human beings. Interpersonal Communication Intro continued In this section we will look at: The interactive aspect of human communication How these interaction occur How human relationships form and disperse The problem of how the communicators cannot directly experience each other’s “self” Interpersonal Communication No matter how much effort one person might put into understanding another person’s message, he or she can only receive it as a coded signal, and in their own minds receivers can only know what they decode the signal to mean. Interpersonal Communication Similarly, when a sender takes that which only s/he knows, and puts it forth to be noticed by others, no matter how much effort the sender puts into trying to share his/her experiences, it cannot be done directly – messages must be encoded as signals before they can be sent. Interpersonal Communication Because human communication happens on many channels simultaneously and involves continual feedback, it is impossible to define one person as the sender and the other as the receiver. (Shannon and weaver cannot explain this kind of interactive communication because of the complexity involved.) Interpersonal Communication The consequence of these two facts-1. that humans cannot know each others’ minds directly, 2. and that the exchange of signals in human communication is extremely complex Means that interpersonal communication is not so much a sending of clear, distinct messages as a continual interpretation of an ongoing stream of data in which the meanings of the messages are continually renegotiated by the participants. Interpersonal Communication As one anthropologist put it: “When we talk about communication we are not talking about a situation in which John acts and Mary reacts to John’s action and in turn John reacts to Mary’s action in some simple, ongoing, one-after-another sequence. Essentially, we discuss communication as a complex and sustaining system through which various members of the society interrelate with more or less efficiency and facility. According to communications theory, John does not communicate to Mary, and Mary does not communicate to John; Mary and John engage in communication” Birdwhistle , 12 The word engagement is important here. Interpersonal Communication Communication is something that is not only something that one human being does to others, but something that humans do together. Individuals use communication to explore, control and enjoy their environments, but just as truly, communication “uses” them as members of society. Interpersonal Communication This observation implies that in the presence of other people, everything that humans say or do (including nothing) is noticed by others and has meaning to them. As an illustration of this consider one particular type of communication that we use everyday but seldom think about… Interpersonal Communication NON-VERBAL COMMUNICATION All Language is communication but very little communication is language. With the 5 senses and body communication in general, our non-linguistic modes of communication in society include music, the visual arts, the visual aspects of film and television; kinship, status, money, sex, and power; accent, height, shape and beauty; much mathematics, dreams, and fantasy; images, ideals, emotions, and desires; the production and exchange of commodities; and class, caste, race, and sex. --- Anthony Wilden Interpersonal Communication Non-verbal communication makes no use of the words, sentences, grammar, and other structures that we associate with spoken and written language. The term “non-verbal” refers to a number of different communication processes – gestures, facial expressions, odors, touch, and so on. Interpersonal Communication Types of non-verbal studies: KINESICS Even within the United States there are “high smile” areas, such as the South, where people do a lot of smiling, and “low smile” areas where they don’t – for example, New England, or even the more dour western part of New York state. – In the great Lakes region, a person who does a lot of smiling may be asked what’s so funny; – in Georgia, someone who doesn’t smile much may be asked what’s wrong. – Its not that people who smile more are happier, but rather that as children all of us learn in which situations we are expected to smile and in which ones we’re not expected to, and we learn differently in different parts of the country. Interpersonal Communication The term kinesics (k’ nees ix), was coined by anthropologist Ray Birdwhitsell to describe the role of body movement in communication. It refers to gestures, posture, facial expressions, and other bodily movements. For example: the gestures we call “smile” and “frown” Interpersonal Communication Although the difference between a “smile” and a “frown” might seem to convey only a simple message, a small change in the arrangement of a speaker’s or listener’s face can dramatically alter the meaning of the words being exchanged. Interpersonal Communication Consider these two variations of a fictional exchange of communication between Carlos and Marissa. Although the words are the same in each case, the facial expressions are different. SITUATION 1 Carlos: Hi Marissa: Hi Carlos: are you going to the party tonight? Marissa: No. Probably not. Carlos: Oh. SITUATION 2 Carlos: Hi Marissa: Hi Carlos: are you going to the party tonight? Marissa: No. Probably not. Carlos: Oh. Interpersonal Communication What can be said about the first conversation? It would seem that the two participants seem glad to see one another; that Carlos is looking forward to the party; that Marissa is disappointed that she won’t be going; that Carlos is too. Interpersonal Communication What can be said about the second conversation? In this case Marissa does not seem happy to see Carlos; she is not upset that she won’t be going to the party; and that Carlos is disappointed that Marissa won’t be going. Interpersonal Communication How do we know this? We don’t. – not for 100% sure. When humans perceive an expression that is interpreted as a smile, they usually take it to imply a certain state of mind is present in the sender, and similarly with a frown. As babies, we begin to notice the attitudes of people around us when they smile and frown, and our life experiences from then on have reinforced those early interpretations Interpersonal Communication Non-verbal communication is very complex. In the previous examples communication occurs on two channels – an aural channel that carries the spoken language, and a visual channel that carries the nonverbal facial expressions. Interpersonal Communication However, even though it isn’t marked, additional non-verbal communication is present. For example: the visual channel carries the hand gestures and body positions of the two participants, and the aural channel carries each speaker’s tone of voice and the way each pauses and punctuates his and her speech. Interpersonal Communication Additional example of the power of facial expression: Interpersonal Communication How do you “read” each expression – that is, what does the person’s expression tell you about his/her state of mind? Notice that in face E, the eyelid has also moved. Does this make the interpretation easier or more difficult? Interpersonal Communication Facial expressions operate as indexes. That is they are directly connected to the emotions of the individual. Because of this they are extremely powerful tools for communication. Interpersonal Communication “Most encounters begin with eye contact. As an opening gesture, it has distinct advantages – it can be so tentative that the looker need not own up and take responsibility for it, as he would have to if he spoke his greeting. Nevertheless, as Goffman has pointed out, once an American has allowed another to catch his eye, he’s held to be open to whatever follows. That’s why waitresses develop such skill at not allowing their eyes to be caught when they’re particularly busy. Children learn this particular function of eye contact very early. When he was just two-years old, my son, confined in a car seat and longing to complain, would keep turning his head to look at me but he wouldn’t say a word until I allowed him to catch my eye.” --Davis 1973, 69 Interpersonal Communication As an example consider the next set of faces in which the shape of the eyebrows, the shape of the eyes, and the shape of the mouth are all subject to change. Interpersonal Communication Although much effort has gone into the study of facial expressions and other bodily movements, scholars are far from understanding this very complex means of communication. There are many books and articles written about the study of “body language” if you are interested in studying it further. Interpersonal Communication Distance and Space The term proxemics was coined by Edward Hall to describe the role of distance and arrangement in human communication. By distance we how close together or far apart the participants are By arrangement e mean the orientation of the bodies – are they face-to-face, back-to-back, at an angle to one another? Hall’s studies showed not only that these are important in communication, but that their use differs from one society to another. Interpersonal Communication For example: the arrangement by which people sit down around a table has much to do with the communication that follows. D F F – A Across the corner C—B E A side by side C – D Across the table E – A From one end to the other C B E – F Diagonally the length of table C – F Diagonally across the table Interpersonal Communication While this seems to make a certain amount of sense, i.e., “closer together” means “more likely to converse,” other aspects of arrangement are more complex. The angle and distance that people put between themselves in conversation often indicates the closeness or their relationship, yet this distance varies from one society to another. Interpersonal Communication In American society, for example, angle and distance often indicate the relationship of the participants and the intensity of their interaction. side-by-side 90° Angle face-to-face Interpersonal Communication In the United States side-by-side conversation is usually more impersonal – as, for example, in the kind of conversation you might have with someone standing beside you in a crowd at a concert or while watching a parade. side-by-side 90° Angle face-to-face Interpersonal Communication People who arrange themselves at a 90°angle are more likely to interact with one another. This pattern is often seen in conversation at parties– participants are able to interact with a certain amount of closeness, but they can also watch what is going on around them. side-by-side 90° Angle face-to-face Interpersonal Communication Face-to-face communication is the most private arrangement and it is often associated with emotional expression. For example, people who are arguing will often place themselves face-to-face, as will close friends who are engaged in an intimate discussion. side-by-side 90° Angle face-to-face Interpersonal Communication The distance that two people put between them in face-to-face conversation varies considerably from one society to another. Some Mediterranean societies, for example, favor closeness, while some Asian societies, for example, favor closeness, while some Asian societies favor great distance. Interpersonal Communication Hall conducted extensive studies in the differences between American and Arab proxemics, noting, for example that: …it used to puzzle me that a special Arab friend seemed unable to walk and talk at the same time. After years in the United States, he could not bring himself to stroll along, facing forward while talking. Our progress would be arrested while he edged ahead, cutting slightly in front of me and turning sideways so that we could see each other. Once in this position, he would stop. His behavior was explained when I learned that for the Arabs to view the other person peripherally is regarded as impolite, and to sit or stand backto-back is considered very rude. You must be involved when interacting with Arabs who are friends. --Hall 1969, 161 Interpersonal Communication Proxemics includes many other aspects of nonverbal communication, including such as touching behavior, posture, odor, body heat, eye contact, and loudness or softness of speech. Because human beings cannot live other than together in the contexts of their societies, they must be continually aware of one another. And because in the presence of others such nonverbal acts as body movements, distances and arrangements, odors, eye contact and the like continually send messages whether we want them to or not. Interpersonal Communication Speech Acts …speaking a language is performing speech acts, acts such as making statements, giving commands, asking questions, making promises, and so on. -- John Searle Interpersonal Communication Suppose during dinner one evening you get up, walk across the room, turn on the faucet, and pour yourself a glass of water – clearly, you performed an action. Now, suppose that you are having dinner and you ask a dinner partner to get you a glass of water. This is also an action…the action of asking. Speech, then, is not something that just happens by coincidence. Rather, to speak is to act. Interpersonal Communication One of the original scholars in this area, Searle, identifies four basic categories of speech acts such as: utterances, propositional utterances, illocutionary utterances, and perlocutionary utterances. These are not separate and independent of each other. Rather they are similar to building blocks. Interpersonal Communication Utterance An utterance is a spoken word or string of spoken words. At the simplest level, to utter is simply to say a word with no particular forethought or intention to communicate meaning. For Example, if you put your hand on the hood of a car sitting out in the hot sun, you might quickly pull it back while uttering the word, “oh!” In this case, you don’t intend to communicate meaning by this – it is simply a reflex action brought on by surprise. (Someone who hears you might take it to mean domething, but you did not plan on it.) Interpersonal Communication Examples of pure utterances include such as sing-song rhymes while jumping rope or making choices (such as for example, “one potato. Two potato, three potato, four…”), singing “scales” for practice, and other similar meaningless expressions. Interpersonal Communication Propositional utterance A more meaningful type of utterance makes reference to or describes a real or imaginary object. In the act of making a propositional utterance the speaker gains the opportunity to interact. If speaker and listener are using the same code, and if both recognize the object to which the speaker is referring, then it becomes possible for them to share meaning. Interpersonal Communication Propositional utterances need not be sentences, and they do not have to intend anything. Any phrase that identifies or specifies something is a propositional utterance. It is important to see utterances and propositions are not separate categories – a proposition utterance is a particular kind of utterance. Interpersonal Communication Illocutionary utterance An illocutionary utterance is spoken with the intention of making contact with a listener. Illocutionary utterances are usually sentences that contain propositional utterances, that is, they refer to things in the world – but it is their intentional nature that is of the most importance. Interpersonal Communication Once it becomes clear that the speaker’s intention is important to the meaning of an utterance, it can be seen that the same set of words might have different meanings depending on the speaker’s intention. This leads scholars to further categorize illocutionary utterances in terms of how they communicate such intent. Interpersonal Communication For example, Consider the sentence, “I’m tired.” Depending on the intention of the speaker, this utterance could mean any of the following: CONTEXT INTENTION MEANING TYPE OF ACT A friend has just asked how I feel To answer the question I feel fatigued Statement Someone I’m trying to avoid has asked me if I’d like to go out tonight To politely avoid her I’d rather not Statement My husband and I are watching a football game on television That we do something else Could we turn this off? It’s late and my small children are asking if we can go to the movies To put them to bed No, go to bed Question or request Command Interpersonal Communication Perlocutionary Utterances Illocutionary speech acts may be intended to provide information, solicit answers to questions, give praise, and so on, but they don’t necessarily require that the listener change his/her behavior. Perlocutionary utterances, on the other hand, do attempt to effect a change. Interpersonal Communication As with the others, perlocutionary speech acts are utterances; they include propositions, and they intend interaction with the receiver. Thus, Searle’s model consists of a series of levels, each of which forms as the foundation for the levels that rests upon it. UTTERANCES PROPOSITIONAL UTTERANCES ILLOCUTIONARY UTTERANCES PERLOCUTIONARY UTTERANCES The intention to affect behavior The intention to interact Reference to other things Words The Speech Act Model Interpersonal Communication Its important to remember that each speech act may be followed by a return act on the part of the receiver. Next we will consider how communication with feedback leads to the kind of continuing communication that supports human relationships. Interpersonal Communication QUIZ Decide which type of speech act is represented by each of these statements. 1. Your teacher says, “ For class tomorrow, please read pages twentyone through forty-seven.” UTTERANCE PROPOSITIONAL ILLOCUTIONARY PERLOCUTIONARY Interpersonal Communication 2. While talking to a group of friends, you mention that you recently went to hear your favorite band play at a local club. UTTERANCE PROPOSITIONAL ILLOCUTIONARY PERLOCUTIONARY 3. You and a friend are talking about a television show that you both watched the night before. You say, “what did you think about Luke’s reaction to Laura’s news?” UTTERANCE PROPOSITIONAL ILLOCUTIONARY PERLOCUTIONARY Interpersonal Communication 4. When you discover that the grade you got on your math exam is a “B”, you let out a sigh of relief. UTTERANCE PROPOSITIONAL ILLOCUTIONARY PERLOCUTIONARY 5. While sitting on a dock that sticks out into the ocean, you see a dolphin. It surfaces nearby and makes a series of highpitched sounds: “Chweee, chweee, chweee.” UTTERANCE PROPOSITIONAL ILLOCUTIONARY PERLOCUTIONARY Interpersonal Communication 6. For the last hour you have been riding alone with your parents as they look at houses that they might want to buy, and they have not said much to you recently. As the car passes through a neighborhood with a house that has a “For Sale” sign out front, you exclaim, “Oh! There’s a nice house.” UTTERANCE PROPOSITIONAL ILLOCUTIONARY PERLOCUTIONARY Interpersonal Communication Relationships Relationships are based not only on the exchange of information but also on interpersonal perceptions. A relationship is defined not so much by what is said as by the partners' expectations for behavior. - Littlejohn, 262 Interpersonal Communication As scholars study the many ways in which individuals interact within society, they have discovered that some kinds of interactions are frequently repeated. These continuous patterns of interaction are called relationships, and many interesting questions about them can be asked -- for example: Interpersonal Communication How many different kinds of relationships are there? Human relationships include such as friendto-friend, enemy-to-enemy, parent-to-child, sibling-to-sibling, employer-to-employee, and many more. Each of these has its own unique pattern of interactions, and so scholars might wonder how many different types of relationship there could be, and how they might be categorized? Interpersonal Communication How do relationships begin? The mother/child relationship begins at (or perhaps before) birth. The employer/employee relationship begins with (or perhaps before) an offer of employment. Scholars wonder how each of the various kinds of relationships get started, and seek to find general patterns that might be present at the beginning of all relationships. Interpersonal Communication How do relationships end? The ending of a relationship involves a change in the quality and amount of the communication between the participants. Sometimes this occurs suddenly, as when a parent dies, and sometimes it occurs over a period of years, as when two friends "drift apart." Scholars wonder how interaction patterns change as relationships dissolve. They also study the kinds of relationships that, instead of ending, change from one type to another - as, for example, when "friends" become "lovers." Interpersonal Communication What is the role of communication in relationships? Some relationships continue, and some don't. Many, if not most, relationships change over time, some becoming "closer and more intimate;" some "more distant." Scholars attempt to define terms such as "close" and "distant", and they investigate the role that communication plays in maintaining relationships. Interpersonal Communication Because humans spend their entire lives engaged in ongoing relationships of many kinds, the study of relationships is important to understanding dayto-day life in any society. Much more has been written on this subject than could ever be covered here - so, the theories and models that are discussed next were chosen to illustrate a variety of approaches to the study of communication in relationships. If you find this subject interesting, a wealth of books and articles await you in the library and/or on the internet. Interpersonal Communication CONTEXT Because one person can never directly know the contents of another person's mind, one can ever be exactly sure how others are interpreting his or her messages. Another way of saying this is to point out that humans cannot be absolutely sure of the context in which others are decoding their messages. Interpersonal Communication The study of speech acts shows the importance of context in human communication. If two people are to understand one another, not only must they speak the same language, but they must make the same assumptions with regard to what is not said. This can lead to situations in which both participants assume that they understand what is being said when in fact they do not. Consider the following example: Interpersonal Communication Two college students, Karen and Mike, converse as they leave their classroom building late one Friday afternoon. "Will you meet me at the party tonight?" Karen says. "Yes," Mike replies. "It's a date." They meet again on Saturday at lunch time in the cafeteria. "Where were you?!" says Mike. "Me!?" Karen replies, "I was there. You're the one who didn't show up." Interpersonal Communication What's the problem here? Clearly Karen and Mike understood what they said to one another on Friday. How did they come to be so confused by Saturday? The answer of course is not in the content of their speech but rather in its context -- in what was not said. Each participant took the phrase "the party" to refer to a party that they knew was to be happening that evening, and each knew of a different party. Thus, even though their statements were true and communicated the proper intentions, the final result was unexpected. Interpersonal Communication Because humans cannot communicate all of the details that relate to all of their messages all of the time, speakers often depend on the listener's knowledge of context to be the same as theirs. Interpersonal Communication One way to view the nature of human relationships, is to see interpersonal communication not as two people throwing messages at one another, but as two people engaged in dancing. In communicating, as in dancing, the partners move in reaction to, but also in anticipation of, one another's steps. If one or the other steps off in an unexpected direction, the other becomes confused and may not be able to follow. In communication, as in dance, it makes little sense to speak of what each partner does on his or her own -- it is their mutual interaction that constitutes the process. Interpersonal Communication KNOWING OTHERS In order for us to deal with other human beings in any systematic and comfortable way, they must behave in a predictable manner. In turn we must behave predictably if we are to comprehend ourselves, much less be predictable to them. Being in some measure predictable constitutes the sine qua non of sanity and humanity. - Ray Birdwhistle Interpersonal Communication Scholars who observe human relationships find that certain patterns of behavior occur over and over again, and that these can be identified in terms of rules. Human beings find themselves constrained by many rules, some of which we never notice. For example, we find ourselves unable to jump up and hang suspended in the air. This is a constraint that is imposed on all who reside on large chunks of matter such as planets, and we are so accustomed to it, that we seldom think about it. Similarly, at an early age most of us learn the constraint that we cannot breath water, and as with the "gravity" rule, we simply follow it without further thought. Interpersonal Communication The constraints imposed by social rules can be just as invisible, but a significant difference between natural and social rules is that social rules are amenable to change. For example, for many decades in American society, if a man and a woman arrived at a door simultaneously, the woman was constrained to wait for the man to act, either by passing through the door, or by offering to pass her through first. That pattern of behavior has changed, and today the "women must wait" rule no longer applies. Interpersonal Communication The "rules" approach to the study of human relationships argues that relationships develop within the constraints of social rules as people engage in communication with one another. The rules-based theory focuses on the developmental aspect of social rules. This theory, which was created by Gerald Miller and Mark Steinberg argues that people work within the constraints of three different kinds of rules while they develop increasingly accurate information about those who they meet. Interpersonal Communication These rules constrain behavior in an increasingly narrow focus. Cultural rules are followed by everyone, sociological rules by the members of particular subgroups, and psychological rules by two individuals. Miller and Steinberg argue that relationships develop as the participants become constrained by progressively tighter sets of rules. That is, complete strangers are likely to follow cultural rules in their interaction. Members of a group shift to sociological rules. And, people who know one another well will develop and follow psychological rules. Interpersonal Communication The Miller-Steinberg Model: Rules Cultural Rules are the rules of broadest scope -- they constrain everyone in the whole society. In U.S. society, for example, it is a cultural rule that everyone should wear clothing at all times in public. Sociological Rules pertain to the subgroups that a person belongs to within the larger society. "White collar" workers, for example, wear suits to work, while "airline" workers wear uniforms. Not all subgroups follow the same rules. For example, at many colleges, the students wear relaxed, informal clothing to class. At other colleges, however, students wear suits, and at some, they wear uniforms. Psychological Rules are the rules that two individuals create between themselves as they get to know one another. For example, as part of a couple going "out" to dinner, a husband might wear a fancy shirt that his wife had given him to signal that he hopes this will be an especially romantic evening. Or, two close friends might wear jewelry that they have given each other to communicate their dedication to one another. Interpersonal Communication As the rules become more tightly focused, the participants become better able to predict each others' behavior. In terms of information, the tighter the rules become, the more uncertainty they eliminate. Thus, psychological rules are more informative than sociological rules, which are more informative than cultural rules. Interpersonal Communication In the same way that relationships progress through levels of rules as they develop, people's knowledge of their partners in the relationship changes. As the participants in a relationship become more and more able to predict each other's behavior, they feel as if they "know" one another better and better. Miller and Steinberg use three kinds of "knowing" to describe the development of relationships: Interpersonal Communication The Miller-Steinberg Model: Ways of Knowing Descriptive Knowing allows us to recognize an individual by means of his or her unique set of identifying characteristics. For example, my friend, Mark, is short with dark hair, has long arms, and so forth. He has a particular way of standing and walking, and when I see him, even at a distance, I know that it is him. Predictive Knowing allows us to anticipate a person's behavior. For example, I know that when I hit a tennis ball to my friend Carol's backhand, that she will usually try to return it straight ahead into the back corner of the court. Explanatory Knowing allows us to have insight into the reasons why others act as they do. For example, I am one of the few people who knows that Brenda avoids James Bond movies because she and her former husband, who she misses terribly, went to see Diamonds Are Forever on their first date. Interpersonal Communication As with the three levels of rules, the levels of knowing become increasingly personal. The Miller-Steinberg model says that as relationships develop, the participants gradually move towards explanatory knowing and psychological rules as they gain more and more information about one another. In other words, as a relationship grows stronger, it grows increasingly personal. Interpersonal Communication The Miller-Steinberg model is called a structural model because it predicts that all relationship patterns will have a certain shape, or structure, as they develop over time. Notice, however, that while the model predicts that as relationships become stronger they will become more personal, it has little to say about how the sharing of personal information actually comes about. The next section introduces a model that investigates precisely that. Interpersonal Communication SELF-DISCLOSURE As the participants in a relationship come to know one another more completely, the quality of their relationship tends to deepen. An area of communication study that has to do with how this comes about is called self-disclosure. Self-disclosure describes the ways in which humans provide others with information about themselves. Interpersonal Communication One simple, clear model of self disclosure was developed by Joseph Luft and Harrington Ingram in 1969. The Johari Window, as it is called, describes an individual in terms of what is known to him- or her-self and to others. Interpersonal Communication In the Johari Window model the Free Area represents characteristics of myself that have been shared with others -- in other words, things I know about myself that others know, too. Interpersonal Communication The Hidden Area represents characteristics of myself that haven't been shared with others. Interpersonal Communication The Blind Area represents public characteristics of myself that are not self-knowledge, that is, I don't know about them, but others do. Interpersonal Communication The Unknown Area represents characteristics of myself that are known to no one, including myself. Interpersonal Communication Consider some examples: Late in afternoon of a day on which I have missed lunch, I find myself at a wedding reception. The host asks if I am hungry. I am, but for reasons of my own, perhaps out of politeness because no one else is eating yet, I say that I am not. The knowledge that I am hungry is in the Hidden Area. I know it, but no one else does. Ali and most of Ali's friends know that he is allergic to cats. This information is in his Free Area. Margie, who often plays poker with her friends, has a habit of smiling whenever she is "bluffing." She doesn't realize this, but some of her friends do. This information is in Margie's Blind Area. Andrea has not yet discovered that she is pregnant. No one else knows this, either. This fact is in her Unknown Area. Interpersonal Communication Taken together, Speech Act Theory, the Miller-Steinberg Model and the Johari Window provide us with many interesting insights into the interactive, engaging nature of human communication. Interpersonal Communication For example, consider a situation in which the speaker performs a perlocutionary act (in an attempt to influence the behavior of the receiver). In doing so the speaker may be basing his or her choice of message on assumptions that are false because they are contained in the receivers Hidden Area. In that case the receiver may be unsure as to how to interpret the message and may respond with a different action than the speaker expects. Interpersonal Communication Interpersonal Communication On the other hand, the receiver may possess information from the addresser's Blind Area, and may respond in a way that seems arbitrary or mysterious to the speaker but which in reality is based on the self-characteristics that the speaker doesn't know about. Each of these situations may unfold differently depending on the level of communication rules and the level of knowledge in use by the participants. Interpersonal Communication For example, in a previous example we spoke of Margie who, when she plays poker with her friends, has a habit of smiling whenever she is "bluffing." This information is in Margie's Blind Area which means that she doesn't realize it, although some of her friends do. Interpersonal Communication Suppose that Margie makes a fairly large bet on a relatively poor holding of cards, hoping to "fake out" or "bluff" the other players into dropping out. By this perlocutionary speech act she intends to influence the others' behavior. But some of the others see her smile and, recognizing that she is bluffing, refuse to act as she wishes them to. To Margie this response is at first puzzling, but if it continues for a period of time, she may notice the pattern and eventually deduce that she is giving away her plans. At this point, she may decline to self-disclose and use her new self-knowledge to "fake" a bluff when in fact she has a good hand. Of course, if she succeeds at this, she will then have disclosed this new knowledge (albeit indirectly) to her friends. Interpersonal Communication Self-disclosure informs one participant in a relationship about the other and thus makes both more knowledgeable of the context of their relationship. Thus, selfdisclosure can lead to the development of personal rules and to closer and more tightly focused relationships. The next section shows how misunderstanding can arise even when both participants are satisfied with their knowledge of one another. Interpersonal Communication PUNCTUATION A group of theorists known as the "Palo Alto Group," who are represented here by the theories of Paul Watzlawick, shift the focus of communication in relationships from the intentions of the individual participants to their mutual interaction within a communication system. Interpersonal Communication Watzlawick's model of interactive communication separates the content of the communication (or what is said) from the form of the communication (or how it is said). Interpersonal Communication Watzlawick's model of interactive communication separates the content of the communication (or what is said) from the form of the communication (or how it is said). In illustration of this, consider Watzlawick's theory of punctuation. Interpersonal Communication Relationships become stronger as the participants become increasingly able to predict one another's behavior. Punctuation describes the way that communicators anticipate the outcomes of communication events as they organize the reality of their day-to-day lives. In particular, punctuation occurs when one of the participants changes his or her behavior based on an anticipation of what the other will say before he or she actually says it. Interpersonal Communication As an example of this, consider the situation in which a student receives from a professor an assignment to write a paper. The student may punctuate this assignment by anticipating that the professor expects the paper to be a certain length, or to be written in a certain style, and so may set out to write what the student thinks the professor "wants." The product of this process will be different than what would have been produced if the student had not taken the professor's preferences into account. Interpersonal Communication Because punctuation is an act that involves one communicator's interpretation of another's expectations, its effects tend to produce ambiguity. In this case, for example, it might be argued that the student's creativity has been restricted by this punctuation. But it also might be argued that the punctuation gives guidance to a student who is learning how to write. Interpersonal Communication As the participants in a relationship punctuate their ongoing communication, patterns of recurring behavior can arise. For example, consider the relationship of Tania and Gerald, two people who truly enjoy one other's company. Tania likes to "sit and chat" and enjoys "fixing up" and doing odd jobs around the house. Gerald likes to "fish" and enjoys the relaxed atmosphere of being out on the water. Interpersonal Communication After a few weeks inside the house, Gerald begins to feel "cooped up," on-the-other-hand, sitting in a fishing boat all day leaves Tania feeling restless and "bored." At first, at home, they both feel good. But as Tania keeps talking and finding new household fix-it jobs for Gerald to do, he begins to feel cooped-up. Tania anticipates his unhappiness and so she suggests that they go fishing. At first, on the boat, they both feel good. But as Gerald relaxes and withdraws into his own thoughts, Tania begins to feel bored. Gerald anticipates her unhappiness and so he suggests that they go home. Interpersonal Communication Interpersonal Communication Even though the participants encounter the same data in the course of their communication, each derives different information. Tania punctuates the communication with regard to Gerald's feeling "cooped-up," and Gerald punctuates it in terms of Tania feeling "bored." The result of this is that they establish a pattern of behavior that neither of them fully comprehends. In fact each of them would probably say that the other is "causing" them to cut their favorite activity short. Interpersonal Communication As with each of the theories and models presented, there is much more to be said of the work of Watzlawick and the Palo Alto Group, but the point of emphasize here is their notion that a relationship is a system in which the individual participants are only partly responsible for what happens, and that the full behavior of the system includes effects that arise only as the two participants interact. Interpersonal Communication COORDINATED MANAGEMENT OF MEANING ... the individual must learn to behave in appropriate ways which permit the other members of the group to recognize and anticipate his behavior. Society is that way in which behavior is calibrated so that existence is not a process of continuous and wasteful trial and error. - Ray Birdwhistle Interpersonal Communication Coordinated Management of Meaning (or, CMM, as it will be abbreviated here) is not a single theory -- rather, it is a unified collection of interrelated definitions and explanations, some of which have been presented in other sections. Taken together, the six elements of the CMM model define a hierarchy of situations and actions that describes the "communication dance." Interpersonal Communication According to CMM, each of us recognizes and makes use of the cultural patterns of our society. These are similar to what other models call "social conventions." Within those patterns, we "know who we are" -- that is, each of us posses a selfconcept. When we interact with others we do so in the context of a relationship, and each contact occurs as a particular event or episode. Our face-to-face communication consists primarily of speech acts which frame the actual words, or the content, of our speech. Interpersonal Communication CMM focuses neither on the individual thoughts of the communicators, nor on the characteristics of the society in which they live. Instead, it focuses on the interaction between the communicators and among the communicators and the members of the society. It is this interaction that generates the meaning of the messages that are sent and received. Interpersonal Communication To begin, imagine that there are two people who are about to communicate with one another in a face-to-face situation. Content The content of the communication described by CMM is contained in sentences that are spoken aloud by the communicants. The notion of content -- as data and information, as signs, and as the paradigms and syntagms of language appears in many of the theories presented. In this case the content is a series of vocal sounds which the example represents by the string of symbols: "Where's the beef?" It is important to see that the content, by itself, is not sufficient to establish the meaning of the communication. All six levels of the model must work together to do that. Speech Act Speech act theory is an integral part of the CMM model. This theory defines illocutionary speech as speech that intends to make contact with a receiver and perlocutionary speech as speech that intends to alter the behavior of the receiver. There are many different kinds of illocutionary and perlocutionary acts -questions, answers, commands, promises, and so forth -- and the participants' knowledge of these plays a part in the communication The phrase "Where's the beef?" could be a question -- that is, the speaker could be asking where she might find the beef, or it might be a statement -- that is, in response to the request "Name a famous fast food advertising slogan from the 1980s" she might respond, "Where's the beef?" The exchange between the two communicants is constrained by the rules of the speech act. In this example we will stipulate that the speaker is asking a question -- this normally means that the receiver feels obligated to respond with a statement in the form of an "answer." Episode Every instance of face-to-face communication occurs somewhere at some time and in the context of whatever else is going on at the time. This setting is called the episode. The same content takes on different meanings when uttered in different settings. A phrase used in a joke told over dinner in a restaurant, for example, may take on a very different meaning when used to make a point in an argument that occurs at the office. Although the type of speech act and the type of episode both affect the meaning of the content, they are not independent of one another. In other words the episode plays a part in determining which kind of speech act is in use, and the speech acts play a part in defining the episode. Relationship The fact that they are speaking relates the communicants to one another. At the very least, they are two strangers, or they may be spouses, coworkers, owner/employee, parent/child, teacher/student, friends, enemies, and so on. (And, of course, they might simultaneously be two or more of these.) As was noted earlier, the levels of the CMM model affect one another. Thus, the relationship level interacts with the episode, the speech act and the content. In this example we now reveal that the speaker is the teacher and the other participant a student. Self-Concept The second person's response will depend in part on the participants' conceptions of "who they are," and on the extent to which they have disclosed their self-concepts to one another. If the teacher sees herself as a somewhat humorous, interactive individual, then she probably presents many questions to her classes, and likely she presents some of them as interesting puzzles or jokes. If the student sees himself as a serious intellectual, then it is likely that he will try to respond with the correct answer to the teacher's question. Cultural Patterns To some extent each of us acts in accordance with the cultural values of our society, and these may have to do with such as race, economic class, gender, and ethnic background. For example, people who work in the offices of large corporations usually wear suits to work and talk about business during lunch. People who live in cardboard boxes on the streets of large cities wear old clothes and don't meet regularly for lunch. Men often refer to sports in their conversation. Women often tell stories about their personal experiences. In this example suppose that the teacher is a woman with a middle-class American cultural background. Given her self-concept we might expect her to conduct class in a relaxed setting with much weight put on classroom discussion. And, suppose that the student is a man with an upper-class Chinese cultural background. In a traditional Chinese educational setting, students are expected to pay a great deal of respect to their teachers and to remain quiet unless called upon. Interpersonal Communication In this case, then, the student might find himself in an uncomfortable setting with a teacher who is acting in what seems to be a strange and unpredictable manner. On the other hand, the teacher might feel that the student is unprepared, not very bright, extremely shy or otherwise unable to participate in the class. Because of their diverse cultural backgrounds, they may have difficulty doing the communication dance. The “Dance” The Dance The author recalls a moment in high school English class during which a seriously intellectual teacher asked a humorously interactive student to name the instrument being played by the damsel in Coleridge's poem Kubla Khan. "A one-string fiddle," the student replied, thereby earning a trip to the principal's office. He wasn't trying to be impolite, of course, but she took it that way. This is the essence of the CMM approach to faceto-face communication -- in the dance, the partners have to agree on how to do the steps -- if they don't, it doesn't work. Interpersonal Communication In summary, notice once again that the Coordinated Management of Meaning model focuses neither on the individual thoughts of the communicators, nor on the specific characteristics of the society in which they live. Instead, it focuses on the interaction between the communicators within the context the society. It is this interaction that generates the meaning of the messages that are sent and received.