Interpersonal communication. Vol. IV: persuasion and competence/
edited by Mark L. Knapp and John A. Daly
- London: SAGE, 2010.
- 415p.
OLUME 4: PERSUASION AND COMPETENCE
Persuasion Harnessing the Science of Persuasion/ Robert B. Ciadini Theories of Persuasion/ Daniel J. O'Keefe A Meta-analysis of Fear Appeals: Implications for effective public health campaigns/ Kim Witte and Mike Allen The Empirical Study of the Persuasive Effects of Evidence: The status after 50 years of research/ John C. Reinard Domineeringness and Dominance: A transactional view/ L. Edna Rogers-Millar and Frank E. Millar III The Theory of Reasoned Action and Self-construal: Evidence from three cultures/ Hee Sun Park and Timothy R. Levine The Persuasiveness of Source Credibility: A critical review of five decades' evidence/ Chanthika Pornpitakpan Compliance-gaining Message Strategies: A typology and some findings concerning the effects of situational differences/ Gerald R. Miller, Frank J. Boster, Michael E. Roloff and David R. Seibold
Competence Communication Competence as Knowledge, Skill, and Impression/ Brian H. Spitzberg Explication and Test of a Model of Communicative Competence/ John M. Wiemann Methods of Social Skills Training and Development/ Chris Segrin and Michelle Givertz Family Communication Standards: What counts as excellent family communication and how are such standards associated with family satisfaction?/ John P. Caughlin Assessment of Basic Social Skills/ Ronald E. Riggio Thin Slices of Expressive Behavior as Predictors of Interpersonal Consequences: A meta-analysis/ Nalini Ambady and Robert Rosenthal Dimensions of Intercultural Effectiveness: Culture specific or culture general?/ William B. Gudykunst and Mitchell R. Hammer Issues in the Development of a Theory of Interpersonal Competence in the Intercultural Context/ Brian H. Spitzberg