Models & Theories Flashcards

1
Q

What is third-person affect?

A

When a person lacks information about other people’s opinions, he/she thinks others will think and behave as he/she would.

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2
Q

What is two-step flow theory?

A

People are influenced by communications from both opinion leaders and mass media; this can have internal and external application.

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3
Q

What is the spiral of silence?

A

People constantly monitor the opinion climate around them. They perceive the majority viewpoint. Those who disagree keep silent. They are afraid of social isolation if they buck the majority view.

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4
Q

What is Attribution theory?

A

To understand or explain circumstances, events or phenomenon, communicators assign (attribute) cause(s) to events.

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5
Q

What is Wilbur-Schramm theory?

A

By analyzing and understanding the different frames of reference for each group, the pr professional can minimize communication barriers by finding common ground and building a messaging approach that resonates with both groups.

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6
Q

What is framing theory?

A

Framing situations/topics that allows relevant stakeholders to look at it in the desired light; instructing an audience how to think about an issue.

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7
Q

What is innoculation?

A

People are more
likely to resist persuasive messages if those
people have been exposed to
counterarguments in advance. People are less
likely to change opinions they have already
formed and tested.

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8
Q

What is rhetoric message theory?

A

The rhetorical approach uses
information about the communicator (SPOKESPERSON), the logic of the message and the emotional appeal of the message to describe and predict how effective a message will be.

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9
Q

What is the two-way symmetrical model?

A

The two-way symmetrical model emphasizes two-way open communication, the sharing of information (research), and an attempt to adjust the organization to the public and the public to the organization.

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10
Q

What is diffusion of innovation?

A

Everett Rogers’ theory describes how people
adopt new products or ideas. Personality traits influence how people approach new things.
The theory proposes five personality
categories: innovators, early adopters, early
majority, late majority and laggards.

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11
Q

What are the stages of diffusion theory?

A

AIETA
1. Awareness
2. Interest
3. Evaluation
4. Trial
5. Adoption

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12
Q

Who are diffusion theory audiences?

A
  1. Innovators
  2. Early adopters
  3. Early majority
    CRITICAL MASS
  4. Majority
  5. Non-adopters
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13
Q

What is the Shannon and Weaver model?

A

A sender > A message > A channel where the message travels > noise or interference > a receiver

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14
Q

What is a system?

A

A system is a set of interacting units that endures through time by responding and adjusting to change pressures to achieve and maintain goals

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15
Q

What is a closed system?

A

A system with impermeable boundaries so they cannot exchange matter, energy or information with their environments. They do not adapt to external change and eventually disintegrate.

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16
Q

What is an open system?

A

Open systems exchange input and output with their environment through permeable boundaries. Recognize and respond to environmental change. Most successful.

17
Q

What is a homeostatis goal state?

A

One that although relatively stable, are subject to change as the result of system inputs

18
Q

What is morphogensis goal state?

A

Changes in the structure and process of open systems. Refers to system growth.

19
Q

What are cybernetics?

A

Study of the input-output process in a system.
1. Goals established
2. Outputs related to goals
3. Feedback on output
4. Comparison of a new system state
5. The need for corrective output

20
Q

What is characteristic of reactive PR program?

A

Employs a closed systems approach; activates only when disturbed.

21
Q

What is characteristic of proactive PR program?

A

Using “radar” to gather information, make adjustments and general outputs to avoid problems. Employs open system approach. Casts PR in role of bringing mutual change in environment and organization.

22
Q

What is functionary PR role?

A

Closed system approach. Only concerned with supplying info on org to environment, not on environment to org. No feedback info is supplied. Maintain status quo while trying to change publics.

23
Q

What is functional PR role?

A

Open systems approach. Changing both org and environment. Relationships between the org and its publics are maintained or changed on the basis of reciprocal feedback.

24
Q

What is the difference between communications and public relations?

A

Public relations is about building and maintaining relationships between orgs and stakeholder publics. Communication, reciprocal process of exchanging information to inform, persuade or instruct, is “done” as part of the four-step of strategic process. Sending a message (dissemination) is not the same as communication.

25
Q

What is the first task of PR in a crowded messaging environment?

A

To get the attention of the targeted publics.
Then…stimulate interest, build desire and intention to act, direct the action.

26
Q

What are the four steps in the process of informing?

A
  1. Attracting attention
  2. Achieving acceptance
  3. Interpreted as intended
  4. Message stored for later
    (5. Accepting change)
27
Q

What is agenda-setting theory?

A

Mass media can have a substantial and important impact on what people think about and what they think; results in large measure from repetition of messaging

28
Q

What is issue salience vs. pertinence?

A

Salience determines the prominence and penetration the issue has with the audience; how well it resonates with each public. People are about what is close to their own interest.

Pertinence is the value found by making object-by-object comparisons.

29
Q

What is cognitive priming?

A

The personal experience or connection that someone has with an issue. Previous or personal exposure to an issue stimulates interest in that issue’s media coverage.

30
Q

What is the definition of public opinion?

A

The ONGOING social process of forming, expressing and adjusting ideals that impact collective behavior. A sense of common-ness vs. consensus.

31
Q

What are the dimensions of public opinion?

A

DISIS
1. Direction - yes/no response to a survey question
2. Intensity - how strongly people feel about their opinions
3. Stability - how long people have held or will hold feeling on an issue
4. Informational support - how much knowledge people hold about the object of their opinion
5. Social support - the extent to which people their opinions are share

32
Q

What is orientation vs. co-orientation?

A

Orientation is perception of issues or objects in one’s environment and perceptions of significant others’ views; Co-orientation is when two or more individuals orientations include the same issues or objects and each other, they are in a state of co-orientation.

33
Q

What is attitude vs. opinion?

A

Attitude is based on a lifetime of accumulating and evaluating information and experiences; Opinion is the judgement expressed in a specific situation or circumstances; generally considered to be verbal.