Awards:

2010 G. R. Miller Outstanding Book Award - Interpersonal Division of the National Communication Association

“New Directions offers the best graduate/professional level introduction to the field of interpersonal communication currently available. It is compact, accessible, and authoritative.”

Mac Parks, Journal of Communication

Presenting today's cutting-edge interpersonal communication research and reflecting on the changes that have occurred over the past three decades, New Directions in Interpersonal Communication Research is relevant and useful to a broad audience, from advanced undergraduate students to the most experienced researchers in the area. By telling the “stories” of research, this volume's contributors avoid the dry, encyclopedic style that is typical of chapters in handbooks. This new collection showcases the vital, collaborative, and interdisciplinary interpersonal communication research that is being conducted today. Editors Sandi W. Smith and Steven R. Wilson bring together a combination of established and newer scholars, as well as “boundary spanners”—those who are applying interpersonal theories and concepts to areas such as family, health, intercultural, organizational, and mediated communication—to illustrate the wealth and breadth of this area of study and research. Each chapter has clear applied value with an emphasis on doing theoretically driven work that has implications for social issues and problems.

Key Features

Offers a broad overview of interpersonal communication as an area of study, situating it historically, discussing advances in theory as well as application, and including a broad range of metatheoretical perspectives; Traces evolving trends during the past 30 years that have shaped the study of interpersonal communication and continue to make it relevant, including issues about the larger society (such as globalization and technology), about the communication discipline (such as fractionalization), and about interpersonal communication in particular (such as a focus on “darker” topics); Includes topics that range from evolutionary and dialectical perspectives on interpersonal communication, to uncertainty and turbulence in interpersonal relationships, to comforting and destructive patterns of communication; Illustrates how interpersonal communication research can be applied to such diverse topics as information management and privacy, family adaptation to medical diagnoses, and how writing blogs affects self-esteem; Tells the background stories of contributors' research programs, including why the topic matters, what they found, where their work is going, and lessons learned

New Directions in Interpersonal Communication Research is intended as a core text for graduate and upper-level undergraduate courses in Interpersonal Communication, Relational Communication, and Communication Theory.

Advances in Deception Detection

Advances in deception detection
Judee K.Burgoon
Timothy R.Levine

Humans expect their interpersonal interactions to be devoid of deception. In fact, our very ability to communicate in some ways depends on a presumption that what others say to us is truthful (Gilbert, 1991; Grice, 1989). Otherwise, we would be faced with a thousand decisions daily about whether to tag each incoming piece of information as truthful or not. Yet deception pervades every corner of our lives, from dealings with the local electronics salesperson, to communications among work team members, to politicians' claims on the news, to the excuses and fibs of family and friends. It occurs not just in face-to-face encounters but also in telephone conversations, voice mails, e-mails, chats, and other forms of mediated ...

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