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Theory Key Names
11th Edition

Annotated list of scholars and terms, from the Instructors Manual and margin notes in the text

List mode: Normal (click on theory name to show detail) | Show All details | Clear details

Chapter 10Social Information Processing Theory


  • Joe Walther
    • Communication professor at University of California, Santa Barbara, who argues that given the opportunity for sufficient exchange of social messages and subsequent relational growth, face-to-face and online channels are equally useful mediums for developing close relationships.
  • Interpersonal impression
    • Knowing how another person responds to you as a unique individual.
  • Cues filtered out
    • Interpretation of online communication that regards the lack of nonverbal cues as a fatal flaw for relationship development. 
  • Flaming
    • Hostile online language that creates a toxic climate for relationship development and growth.
  • Inconsistent messages
    • Messages where the verbal and nonverbal content don’t match.
  • Anticipated future interaction
    • A way of extending psychological time; the likelihood of future interaction motivates online communicators to develop a relationship.
  • Chronemics
    • The study of people’s systemic handling of time in their interaction with others.
  • Hyperpersonal model
    • The claim that online relationships are often more intimate than those developed when partners are physically together.
  • Selective self-presentation
    • An online positive portrayal without fear of contradiction, which enables people to create an overwhelmingly favorable impression.
  • Attribution
    • A perceptual process whereby we observe what people do and then try to figure out what they’re really like.
  • Asynchronous channel
    • A nonsimultaneous medium of communication that each individual can use when they desire.
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
    • The tendency for a person’s expectation of others to evoke a response from them that confirms what was originally anticipated.
  • Warranting value
    • The degree to which a person is perceived to have manipulated, controlled, or shaped information about themselves.
  • Ecological validity
    • Accuracy of prediction and explanation in the real world. 
  • Modality weaving
    • Integrating or layering a variety of communication channels into relational communication.


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Theory Key Names
11th Edition

Annotated list of scholars and terms, from the Instructors Manual and margin notes in the text

List mode: Normal (click on theory name to show detail) | Show All details | Clear details

Chapter 10Social Information Processing Theory


  • Joe Walther
    • Communication professor at University of California, Santa Barbara, who argues that given the opportunity for sufficient exchange of social messages and subsequent relational growth, face-to-face and online channels are equally useful mediums for developing close relationships.
  • Interpersonal impression
    • Knowing how another person responds to you as a unique individual.
  • Cues filtered out
    • Interpretation of online communication that regards the lack of nonverbal cues as a fatal flaw for relationship development. 
  • Flaming
    • Hostile online language that creates a toxic climate for relationship development and growth.
  • Inconsistent messages
    • Messages where the verbal and nonverbal content don’t match.
  • Anticipated future interaction
    • A way of extending psychological time; the likelihood of future interaction motivates online communicators to develop a relationship.
  • Chronemics
    • The study of people’s systemic handling of time in their interaction with others.
  • Hyperpersonal model
    • The claim that online relationships are often more intimate than those developed when partners are physically together.
  • Selective self-presentation
    • An online positive portrayal without fear of contradiction, which enables people to create an overwhelmingly favorable impression.
  • Attribution
    • A perceptual process whereby we observe what people do and then try to figure out what they’re really like.
  • Asynchronous channel
    • A nonsimultaneous medium of communication that each individual can use when they desire.
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy
    • The tendency for a person’s expectation of others to evoke a response from them that confirms what was originally anticipated.
  • Warranting value
    • The degree to which a person is perceived to have manipulated, controlled, or shaped information about themselves.
  • Ecological validity
    • Accuracy of prediction and explanation in the real world. 
  • Modality weaving
    • Integrating or layering a variety of communication channels into relational communication.


You can access the Key Names for a particular chapter in several ways:

  • Switch to View by Theory, then select the desired theory/chapter from the drop-down list at the top of the page. Look in the list of available resources.
  • To quickly find a theory by chapter number, use the Table of Contents and link from there. It will take you directly to the theory with available options highlighted.
  • You can also use the Theory List, which will take you directly to the theory with available options highlighted.

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