Message Production

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AAT
action
Action Assembly Theory
Action Consequence Associations
advanced message production theory
assembly
associations
Category=CFA
Category=GPF
Category=JMR
Cognitive Load Hypothesis
communication psychology
consequence
eq_bestseller
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Green Base
Hedging Devices
Importance Component
Interaction Adaptation Theory
interaction goals
Interpersonal Deception Theory
Local Moment
long
Message Design Logic
Message Planning
Message Production
Message Production Process
Message Target
Motivational Emotional Systems
nonverbal communication research
Nonverbal Objects
Painful Self-disclosures
physiological factors in communication
planning
Posterior Cingulate Gyrus
procedural
process
records
Slime Mold
social cognition processes
Spontaneous Communication
theory
verbal behavior analysis
Vice Versa
WAIS
WAIS Digit Span
WAIS Subtest

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805823240
  • Weight: 680g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Sep 1997
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The last two decades have seen the development of a number of models that have proven particularly important in advancing understanding of message-production processes. Now it appears that a "second generation" of theories is emerging, one that reflects considerable conceptual advances over earlier models. Message Production: Advances in Communication Theory focuses on these new developments in theoretical approaches to verbal and nonverbal message production. The chapters reflect a number of characteristics and trends resident in these theories including:
* the nature and source of interaction goals;
* the impact of physiological factors on message behavior;
* the prominence accorded conceptions of goals and planning;
* attempts to apply models of intra-individual processes in illuminating inter-individual phenomena;
* treatments which involve hybrid intentional/design-stance approaches; and
* efforts to incorporate physiological constructs and to meld them with psychological and social terms.

The processes underlying the production of verbal and nonverbal behaviors are exceedingly complex, so much so that they resist the development of unified explanatory schemes. The alternative is the mosaic of emerging theories such as are represented in this book -- each approach according prominence to certain message-production phenomena while obscuring others, and providing a window on some portion of the processes that give rise to those phenomena while remaining mute about other processes. The amalgam of these disparate treatments, then, becomes the most intellectually compelling characterization of message-production processes.