ABSTRACT
Our interpretations of the world we live in, and the people and institutions that comprise it, are acquired through complex interactions among what we believe to be true, what the world is, and/or what others think it is. Understanding those complex interactions is one of the most important goals of the social sciences. Of the many disciplines that have contributed to that understanding, two take center stage in this book -- psychology and communication.
This volume's purpose is to reconnect the partially isolated environments of social psychology and communication. To do so, it utilizes four building blocks:
* the cognitive foundations of interpersonal communication as it might be studied from a social psychological perspective
* insiders' views of interpersonal communication from a cognitive psychological standpoint
* insiders' approaches to interpersonal communication from an AI perspective
* a critique of the cognitive enterprise that reflects the strong philosophical grounding of communication.
Overall, the chapters typify some of the most interesting cognitive work done in the study of interpersonal communication. As such, the book should promote productive dialogue across disciplinary boundaries and stimulate further work within the field of interpersonal communication.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |43 pages
Interpersonal Communication
part |90 pages
The Cognitive Psychological Perspective Inside Interpersonal Communication Theory
chapter |35 pages
An Action-Assembly Perspective on Verbal and Nonverbal Message Production
part |83 pages
Interpersonal Communication from an Artificial Intelligence Perspective
part |24 pages
The Cognitive Approach to Interpersonal Communication