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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.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article found that PSM has a direct and positive effect on interpersonal citizenship behavior in public organizations, even when accounting for the significant role of co-worker support and the effect of organizational environment.

300 citations

Book ChapterDOI
21 Apr 2006
TL;DR: Bowlby as mentioned in this paper suggests that early attachment-related experiences become eventually transformed into inner representations, which have predictable implications for attachmentrelevant situations throughout life, and for extremely stressful interpersonal experiences.
Abstract: Bowlby’s notion of a person’s working model of attachment relationships indicates that early attachment-related experiences become eventuallytransformed into inner representations (Bowlby 1973). Such inner representations, he proposes, have predictable implications for attachmentrelevant situations throughout life, and for extremely stressful interpersonal experiences.

300 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The history of the person-situation controversy is reviewed in this article, where two models, a social intelligence model and a goals model, for analyzing personsituation interaction and the question of person-environment congruence are considered.
Abstract: The history of the person-situation controversy is reviewed. Although this controversy is not new, and most psychologists now see themselves as interactionists, they disagree about the kinds of person, situation, and interaction process units that should be emphasized. Two models, a social intelligence model and a goals model, for analyzing person-situation interaction and the question of person-environment congruence are considered.

300 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is expected that hard news media use has an overall positive main effect on political participation, but this main effect cloaks significantly different effects for people who talk to others about politics rather frequently and those who do not.
Abstract: The idea of interpersonal discussions among citizens being the “soul of democracy” has been treatedalmost as a truism in recent research on media, interpersonal communication, and democratic citizenship. Without a doubt, there is strong evidence to support the notion that interpersonal discussion of politics is a key antecedent of political participation. This study proposes that the relationships between hard news media use, interpersonal discussion of politics, and participatory behavior are far more complex than previously assumed. Specifically, it is expected that hard news media use has an overall positive main effect on political participation. This main effect, however, cloaks significantly different effects for people who talk to others about politics rather frequently and those who do not. National survey data support the differential gains model for newspaper andtelevision hardnews use. This article explores explanations for this phenomenon and implications for future research and policy.

299 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article proposed an O-S-R-O-R model of campaign communication mediation, which combines insights from iterations of the communication mediation model and cognitive mediation model (Eveland, 2001; Eveland, Shah, & Kwak, 2003) to theorize a set of the interrelated reasoning processes that channel the influences of campaign exposure and news consumption on political engagement.
Abstract: Recent communication research concerning participatory politics has found that the effects of media, especially campaign ads, conventional news, and online political resources, are largely mediated through interpersonal discussion about politics. This article extends this line of theorizing about the role of political conversation in citizen competence by testing an O-S-R-O-R model of campaign communication mediation, a modification and extension of the longstanding O-S-O-R model of communication effects. This model combines insights from iterations of the communication mediation model (McLeod et al., 2001; Shah et al., 2007) and cognitive mediation model (Eveland, 2001; Eveland, Shah, & Kwak, 2003) to theorize a set of the interrelated reasoning (R) processes that channel the influences of campaign exposure and news consumption on political engagement. Three key mediators of campaign and news influence are postulated: face-to-face political conversation, online political messaging, and cognitive reflection. We provide empirical evidence to test this model by merging two datasets: (1) tracking of the content and placement of campaign messages in the 2000 and 2004 election cycles, and (2) surveys of traditional and digital media consumption and levels of campaign participation during these same elections. Findings reveal that political conversation, political messaging, and cognitive reflection mediate the effects of campaign advertising exposure and news consumption on political participation and knowledge, providing considerable support for our theory. This O-S-R-O-R model helps organize a large body of theorizing and research on campaigns and conversation in the communication sciences.

299 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