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COMS 100 Chapter 3 Crossword

Horizontales
A knowledge structure that defines the clearest or most representative example of some category.
The beliefs, understandings, practices, and ways of interpreting experience that are shared by a group of people.
These define expected or appropriate sequences of action in particular settings.
A predominant Western value that regards each person as unique, important, and to be recognized for her or his individual qualities and behavior.
A predictive generalization about people or situations.
The subjective process of organizing and making sense of perceptions.
A bipolar mental yardstick that allows us to measure people and situations along specific dimensions of judgment, such as “honest– dishonest" (Two Words).
The number of mental constructs an individual uses, how abstract they are, and how elaborately they interact to create perceptions (Two Words).
The tendency to attribute our positive actions and successes to stable, global, internal influences that we control and to attribute negative actions and failures to unstable, specific, external influences beyond our control (Three Words with no spaces).
A technique for reducing speaking anxiety, in which one visualizes oneself communicating effectively in progressively challenging speaking situations in called ________ visualization.
The observation and regulation of one’s own communication.
The ability to feel with another person, to feel what he or she feels in a situation.
The assumption that we understand what another person thinks or how another person perceives something (Two Words).
Verticales
An active process of selecting, organizing, and interpreting people, objects, events, situations, and activities.
Mental structures people use to organize and interpret experience (Two Words).
An interpretation that goes beyond the facts known but is believed to logically follow from them.
A theory that holds that we organize and interpret experience by applying cognitive structures called schemata.
A belief or opinion based on observations, feelings, assumptions, or other nonfactual phenomena.
An explanation of why things happen and why people act as they do; not necessarily correct interpretations of others and their motives.
A theory claiming that when our expectations are violated, we become more cognitively alert as we struggle to understand and cope with unexpected behaviors is called Expectancy ________ Theory.