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Browse the full collection of course materials, past exams, study guides and class notes for 04:189:101 - Introduction to Communication and Information Processes at Rutgers …
PROFESSORS
All Professors
All semesters
Jenny Mandelbaum
fall
26
Linardopoulos
fall
17
Householder, B
fall
14

Verified Documents for Linardopoulos

Class Notes

Taken by our most diligent verified note takers in class covering the entire semester.
04:189:101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Preprint, Movable Type, Human Communication
Defining communication communication vs. communications communication - process, communications - tools. What is communication: 126 definitions of comm
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04:189:101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Communication Theory, Office Space, Nonverbal Communication
Intro comm & info lecture 1 introduction. Welcome to intro to communication and informatics: notes generally follow the chronological structure of the
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04:189:101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Paralanguage, Human Communication, Movable Type
Intro comm & info lecture 2 defining communication. Objectives: review syllabus, logistics, canvas checklist, upcoming assignments, defining commun
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04:189:101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Office Space, Nace International
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04:189:101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Academic Integrity, Turnitin
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04:189:101 Lecture 3: Communication Theory Defined
Personal theories: everyday experiences, taken for granted, private, stable. Scholarly theories: systematic observation/testing, questioned, public, su
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04:189:101 Lecture 3: INTRO TO INFO. & COMM. : Frame of Reference
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04:189:101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Stress Management, Models Of Communication
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04:189:101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Social Comparison Theory, Subjective Constancy, Fundamental Attribution Error
Communicating expectations: the perceived self: the person you really believe yourself to be, the ideal or possible self: the person you would like to
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04:189:101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Stress Management
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04:189:101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Psycholinguistics, Microaggression Theory
Fundamental communication principles: communication is subject to error, communication is dynamic, communication is symbolic, you cannot not communicat
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04:189:101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Public Space, Chronemics, Proxemics
Nonverbal defined (cid:498)all intentional and unintentional messages that are not written, spoken, or sounded. (cid:499) Nonverbal communication: faci
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04:189:101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 9: Interpersonal Communication, The Blind
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04:189:101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Smart Casual, Business Casual, Paralanguage
Types of non-verbal communication (nvc: facial expressions & eye contact, facial expressions the most expressive part of nvm, communicate a very specif
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04:189:101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Chronemics, Proxemics, Microsoft Powerpoint
All intentional and unintentional messages that are not written, spoken, or sounded. (powerpoint, slide 1) The more you know another person, the better
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04:189:101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 11: Hillary Clinton, Interpersonal Communication, Stress Management
04:189:101:02 lecture 11 interpersonal communication intro cont"d. Doesn"t always have an explicit meaning can be interpreted in a variety of ways. Doe
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04:189:101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 11: Interpersonal Communication, Microsoft Powerpoint, The Blind
Nonverbal interactions involve up to 80-90% of our daily interactions. From a communication perspective, what you don"t say is more important than what
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