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Interpersonal communication

About: Interpersonal communication is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 26243 publications have been published within this topic receiving 767999 citations.


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Book
01 Jan 1972
TL;DR: The Power of Interpersonal Skills as mentioned in this paper The power of personal skills is the ability to develop and maintain trust between oneself and others, and to increase the communication skills of individuals in an interpersonal setting.
Abstract: 1. The Power of Interpersonal Skills. 2. Self-Disclosure. 3. Developing and Maintaining Trust. 4. Increasing Your Communication Skills. 5. Expressing Your Feelings Verbally. 6. Expressing Your Feelings Nonverbally. 7. Helpful Listening and Responding. 8. Resolving Interpersonal Conflicts. 9. Anger, Stress, and Managing Feelings. 10. Building Relationships with Diverse Individuals. 11. Barriers to Interpersonal Effectiveness. 12. Epilogue. Apendix. Glossary. References. Index.

447 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors integrate social identity and impression management theories to capture the dual impact of personal characteristics and group affiliations on professional image construction, and describe how and why individuals proactively negotiate their personal and social identities during interpersonal encounters.
Abstract: I integrate social identity and impression management theories to capture the dual impact of personal characteristics and group affiliations on professional image construction. In so doing, I describe how and why individuals proactively negotiate their personal and social identities during interpersonal encounters. The model highlights the multilevel impact of credible and authentic professional image construction on intrapsychic, interpersonal, workgroup, and organizational outcomes.

446 citations

BookDOI
01 Jan 1999
TL;DR: On the Interpersonal Nature of Depression - Overview and Synthesis The Emergence of an Interpersonal Approach to Depression Social Context and Depression - an Integrative Stress and Coping Framework Interpersonal and Cognitive Pathways into the Origins of Attributional Style - a Developmental Perspective Loneliness, Shyness and depression - the Aetiology and Interrelationships of everyday problems in living Schematic and Interpersonal Conceptualizations of Depression.
Abstract: On the Interpersonal Nature of Depression - Overview and Synthesis The Emergence of an Interpersonal Approach to Depression Social Context and Depression - an Integrative Stress and Coping Framework Interpersonal and Cognitive Pathways into the Origins of Attributional Style - a Developmental Perspective Loneliness, Shyness and Depression - the Aetiology and Interrelationships of Everyday Problems in Living Schematic and Interpersonal Conceptualizations of Depression - an Integration Vulnerable Self-Esteem and Social Processes in Depression - Toward an Interpersonal Model of Self-Esteem Regulation Striving for Confirmation - the Role of Self-Verification in Depression Silencing the Self - Inner Dialogues and Outer Realities Sociophysiology and Depression Marital Discord and Depression - Exploring the Potential of Attachment Theory to Guide Integrative Clinical Intervention Depressed Parents and Family Functioning - Interpersonal Effects and Children's Functioning and Development A Social-Cognitive Model of Interpersonal Processes in Depression Thinking Interactionally About Depression - a Radical Restatement.

445 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the relationship between interpersonal trust, trust in political institutions and non-institutionalised legal political participation is analyzed based on data from the Eurobarometer surveys and the European/World Values Studies.
Abstract: Trust is a core concept in the continuing political science discourse on social capital and its meaning for democracy. In this article, the relationship between interpersonal trust, trust in political institutions and non‐institutionalised legal political participation is analysed based on data from the Eurobarometer surveys and the European/World Values Studies. The statistical relationship between interpersonal trust and political trust in nine European countries is found to be small, though generally positive. Thus, interpersonal trust cannot be regarded as an important antecedent or consequence of political trust. A different picture emerges regarding the relationship between political trust and legal non‐institutionalised participation: the lower political trust the higher the probability of engaging in direct action. Finally, a positive relationship between interpersonal trust and direct action is found, thereby pointing to trust as a precondition or consequence of non‐institutionalised political in...

444 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that every utterance has at most a single interpretation consistent with the principle of relevance, which is enough on its own to account for the interaction of linguistic meaning with contextual factors in disambiguation, reference assignment, the recovery of implicatures, the interpretation ofmetaphor and irony, the Recovery of illocutionary force, and other linguistically underdetermined aspects of utterance interpretation.
Abstract: In Relevance: Communication and Cognition, we outline a new approach to the study of human communication, one based on a general view of human cognition Attention and thought processes, we argue, automatically turn toward information that seems relevant: that is, capable of yielding cognitive effects – the more, and the more economically, the greater the relevance We analyse both the nature ofcognitive effects and the inferential processes by which they are derivedCommunication can be achieved by two different means: by encoding and decoding messages or by providing evidence for an intended inference about the communicator's informative intention Verbal communication, we argue, exploits both types of process The linguistic meaning of an utterance, recovered by specialised decoding processes, serves as the input to unspecialised central inferential processes by which the speaker's intentions are recognisedFundamental to our account of inferential communication is the fact that to communicate is to claimsomeone's attention, and hence to imply that the information communicated is relevant We call this idea, that communicated information comes with a guarantee of relevance, the principle of relevance We show that every utterance has at most a single interpretation consistent with the principle of relevance, which is thus enough on its own to account for the interaction of linguistic meaning with contextual factors in disambiguation, reference assignment, the recovery of implicatures, the interpretation ofmetaphor and irony, the recovery of illocutionary force, and other linguistically underdetermined aspects of utterance interpretation

444 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20232,257
20224,836
20211,053
20201,225
20191,219
20181,123