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Related Concept Videos

Communication01:03

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Communication between two animals occurs when one animal transmits an information signal that causes a change in the animal that receives the information. Organisms communicate with one another in a host of different ways. Signals can be auditory, chemical, visual, tactile, or a combination of these. Communication is a critical behavioral adaptation that promotes survival, growth, and reproduction.
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Communication01:28

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Sharing information, concepts, and emotions to foster mutual understanding is communication. The sender, recipient, and transaction must be considered in this manner. The sender is the person who shares the message, the recipient is the person who receives and understands the message, and the transaction is the method used to deliver the message and the variables that affect the communication's context and surroundings. The nurse-client connection is built on therapeutic communication.
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Communication is a lifelong learning process. Through therapeutic communication, nurses can collect relevant assessment data, provide education and counseling, and interact during nursing interventions. Sending and receiving messages occur through verbal and nonverbal communication techniques and can happen separately or simultaneously.
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A spontaneous process is one that occurs naturally under certain conditions. A nonspontaneous process, on the other hand, will not take place unless it is “driven” by the continual input of energy from an external source. Processes have a natural tendency to occur in one direction under a given set of conditions. Water will naturally flow downhill (spontaneous process), but uphill flow (nonspontaneous process) requires outside intervention such as the use of a pump. Iron exposed to...
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Related Experiment Videos

Beyond Content of Conversation.

Namkje Koudenburg1, Tom Postmes1, Ernestine H Gordijn1

  • 11 University of Groningen, The Netherlands.

Personality and Social Psychology Review : an Official Journal of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc
|February 14, 2016
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

The way we converse, not just what we say, shapes social bonds and group dynamics. Subtle conversational cues like pauses and turn-taking influence solidarity and social structure.

Keywords:
conversational formhierarchysocial normssocial structure

Related Experiment Videos

Area of Science:

  • Social Psychology
  • Sociology
  • Communication Studies

Background:

  • Social interaction is crucial for forming relationships and groups.
  • The content of interaction (information transfer) is well-studied.
  • The impact of conversational form on social solidarity is less understood.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To review the influence of conversational act on social solidarity, independent of content.
  • To explore how micro-characteristics of conversation regulate relationships and solidarity.

Main Methods:

  • Literature review focusing on the form and flow of conversation.
  • Analysis of conversational micro-characteristics (e.g., silences, turn-taking).

Main Results:

  • Conversational form significantly impacts the emergence and regulation of social solidarity.
  • The flow of conversation acts as a gauge for group structures like hierarchy and norms.
  • Minor changes in conversational dynamics can lead to substantial shifts in social structure.

Conclusions:

  • The form of conversation is perceived as a reflection of group social structures.
  • Conversational dynamics provide continuous feedback on group norms and shared reality.
  • Understanding conversational form is key to regulating social structures within groups.