SELECT AN EDITION:
9th EDITION   10th EDITION   11th EDITION
A First Look at Communication Theory Reveal main menu
 

The screen on this device is not wide enough to display Theory Resources. Try rotating the device to landscape orientation to see if more options become available.

Resources available to all users:

  • Text Comparison—theories covered in A First Look and ten other textbooks
  • Theory Overview—abstract of each chapter
  • Self-Help Quizzes—for student preparation
  • Chapter Outlines
  • Key Names—important names and terms in each chapter
  • Conversation Videos—interviews with theorists
  • Application Logs—student application of theories
  • Essay Questions—for student prepatation
  • Suggested Movie Clips—tie-in movie scenese to theories
  • Links—web resources related to each chapter
  • Primary Sources—for each theory with full chapter coverage
  • Further Resources—bibliographic and other suggestions
  • Changes—for each theory, since the previous edition
  • Theory Archive—PDF copies from the last edition in which a theory appeared

Resources available only to registered instructors who are logged in:

  • Discussion Suggestions
  • Exercises & Activities
  • PowerPoint® presentations you can use
  • Short Answer Quizzes—suggested questions and answers

Information for Instructors. Read more


CHANGE TO View by Theory
Theory Outlines
11th Edition

From the Instructors Manual

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

Chapter  8Social Penetration Theory


  1. Introduction.
  1. Developed by social psychologists Irwin Altman and Dalmas Taylor, social penetration theory explains how relational closeness develops.
  2. Closeness develops only if individuals proceed in a gradual and orderly fashion from superficial to intimate levels of exchange as a function of both immediate and forecast outcomes.
  1. Personality structure: a multilayered onion.
  1. The outer layer is the public self.
  2. The inner core is one’s private domain.
  1. Closeness through self-disclosure.
  1. The main route to deep social penetration is through verbal self-disclosure.
  2. With the onion-wedge model, the depth of penetration represents the degree of personal disclosure.
  3. The layers of the onion are tougher and more tightly wrapped near the center.
  1. The depth and breadth of self-disclosure.
  1. Peripheral items are exchanged more frequently and sooner than private information.
  2. Self-disclosure is reciprocal, especially in early stages of relationship development.
  3. Penetration is rapid at the start but slows down quickly as the tightly wrapped inner layers are reached.
  1. Societal norms prevent too much early self-disclosure.
  2. Most relationships stall before a stable intimate exchange is established.
  3. Genuine intimate exchange is rare but when it is achieved, relationships become meaningful and enduring.
  4. Sharing personal narratives, which tend to contain a carefully structured story, deeper emotion, and greater detail than other shared information, is a quick path to stronger bonds.
  1. Depenetration is a gradual process of layer-by-layer withdrawal.
  2. For true intimacy, depth and breadth of penetration are equally important.
  1. Regulating closeness on the basis of rewards and costs.
  1. Social penetration theory draws heavily on the social exchange theory of John Thibaut and Harold Kelley.
  2. If perceived mutual benefits outweigh the costs of greater vulnerability, the process of social penetration will proceed.
  3. Three important concepts are: relational outcome; relational satisfaction; and relational stability.
  1. Relational outcome: Rewards minus costs.
  1. Thibaut and Kelley suggest that people try to predict the outcome of an interaction before it takes place.
  1. The economic approach to determining behavior dates from John Stuart Mill’s principle of utility.
  2. The minimax principle of human behavior claims that people seek to maximize benefits and minimize costs.
  3. The higher we index a relational outcome, the more attractive the behavior that might make it happen.
  1. Social exchange theory assumes that people can accurately gauge the benefits of their actions and make sensible choices based on their predictions.
  2. As relationships develop, the nature of interaction that friends find rewarding evolves.
  1. The comparison level (CL): Gauging relational satisfaction.
  1. A person’s CL is the threshold above which an outcome appears attractive.
  2. Our relational history establishes our CL for friendship, romance, or family ties.
  3. Sequence and trends play large roles in evaluating a relationship.
  1. The comparison level of alternatives (CLalt): Gauging relational stability.
  1. The CLalt is the best relational outcomes currently available outside the relationship.
  2. While one’s CL is relatively stable over time, CLalt compares the options at the current moment.
  3. When current outcomes slide below an established CLalt,, relational instability increases.
  4. Social exchange theories have an economic orientation.
  5. The CLalt explains why people sometimes stay in unsatisfying relationships.
  1. Some women endure abuse because Outcome > CLalt.
  2. They will leave only when CLalt > Outcome.
  1. The relative values of Outcome, CL, and CLalt help determine one’s willingness to disclose.
  1. Optimum disclosure will occur when both parties believe that Outcome > CLalt > CL.
  2. A relationship can be more than satisfying if it is stable, but other satisfying options are also available (in case this relationship turns sour).
  1. Ethical reflection: Epicurus’ ethical egoism.
  1. Psychological egoism reflects many social scientists’ conviction that all of us are motivated by self-interest.
  2. Ethical egoism claims we should act selfishly.
  3. Epicurus emphasized the passive pleasures of friendship, good digestion, and above all, the absence of pain.
  4. Other philosophers (Thomas Hobbes, Adam Smith, Friedrich Nietzsche, Ayn Rand) echo the Epicurean call for selfish concern.
  1. Dialectics and the environment.
  1. Altman originally thought that openness is the predominant quality of relationship changes.  The desire for privacy may counteract a unidirectional quest for intimacy.
  2. A dialectical model suggests that human social relationships are characterized by openness or contact and closedness or separateness between participants.
  3. Altman also identified the environment as a heuristic cue that might guide our decisions to disclose.
  4. Disclosing of one’s self may include both our cognitive space (our minds, thoughts) and our physical space or territory. 
  5. Sandra Petronio’s communication privacy management theory (ch. 12) maps out the intricate ways people manage boundaries around their personal information.
  1. Critique: Pulling back from social penetration.
  1. Petronio thinks it’s simplistic to equate self-disclosure with relational closeness.
  2. She also challenges the theorists’ view of disclosure boundaries as being fixed and increasingly less permeable.
  3. Natalie Pennington suggests that much of “what is discovered is passively consumed and rarely discussed” when learning about others through social media. The theory may need to be updated to account for newer communication technology.
  4. Can a complex blend of advantages and disadvantages be reliably reduced to a single index?
  5. Are people so consistently selfish that they always opt to act strictly in their own best interest?
  6. Paul Wright believes that friendships often reach a point of such closeness that self-centered concerns are no longer salient.
  7. Nevertheless, the theory has withstood the test of time with testable hypotheses and quantitative research. 

 



You can access the Outline 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.

Back to top



Resources
by Type


Instructors can get
additional resources.
Read more




 OUTLINES


 VIDEOS


 ESSAY






New to Theory
Resources?

Find out more
in this short
video overview
(3:01).

CHANGE TO View by Theory
Theory Outlines
11th Edition

From the Instructors Manual

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

Chapter  8Social Penetration Theory


  1. Introduction.
  1. Developed by social psychologists Irwin Altman and Dalmas Taylor, social penetration theory explains how relational closeness develops.
  2. Closeness develops only if individuals proceed in a gradual and orderly fashion from superficial to intimate levels of exchange as a function of both immediate and forecast outcomes.
  1. Personality structure: a multilayered onion.
  1. The outer layer is the public self.
  2. The inner core is one’s private domain.
  1. Closeness through self-disclosure.
  1. The main route to deep social penetration is through verbal self-disclosure.
  2. With the onion-wedge model, the depth of penetration represents the degree of personal disclosure.
  3. The layers of the onion are tougher and more tightly wrapped near the center.
  1. The depth and breadth of self-disclosure.
  1. Peripheral items are exchanged more frequently and sooner than private information.
  2. Self-disclosure is reciprocal, especially in early stages of relationship development.
  3. Penetration is rapid at the start but slows down quickly as the tightly wrapped inner layers are reached.
  1. Societal norms prevent too much early self-disclosure.
  2. Most relationships stall before a stable intimate exchange is established.
  3. Genuine intimate exchange is rare but when it is achieved, relationships become meaningful and enduring.
  4. Sharing personal narratives, which tend to contain a carefully structured story, deeper emotion, and greater detail than other shared information, is a quick path to stronger bonds.
  1. Depenetration is a gradual process of layer-by-layer withdrawal.
  2. For true intimacy, depth and breadth of penetration are equally important.
  1. Regulating closeness on the basis of rewards and costs.
  1. Social penetration theory draws heavily on the social exchange theory of John Thibaut and Harold Kelley.
  2. If perceived mutual benefits outweigh the costs of greater vulnerability, the process of social penetration will proceed.
  3. Three important concepts are: relational outcome; relational satisfaction; and relational stability.
  1. Relational outcome: Rewards minus costs.
  1. Thibaut and Kelley suggest that people try to predict the outcome of an interaction before it takes place.
  1. The economic approach to determining behavior dates from John Stuart Mill’s principle of utility.
  2. The minimax principle of human behavior claims that people seek to maximize benefits and minimize costs.
  3. The higher we index a relational outcome, the more attractive the behavior that might make it happen.
  1. Social exchange theory assumes that people can accurately gauge the benefits of their actions and make sensible choices based on their predictions.
  2. As relationships develop, the nature of interaction that friends find rewarding evolves.
  1. The comparison level (CL): Gauging relational satisfaction.
  1. A person’s CL is the threshold above which an outcome appears attractive.
  2. Our relational history establishes our CL for friendship, romance, or family ties.
  3. Sequence and trends play large roles in evaluating a relationship.
  1. The comparison level of alternatives (CLalt): Gauging relational stability.
  1. The CLalt is the best relational outcomes currently available outside the relationship.
  2. While one’s CL is relatively stable over time, CLalt compares the options at the current moment.
  3. When current outcomes slide below an established CLalt,, relational instability increases.
  4. Social exchange theories have an economic orientation.
  5. The CLalt explains why people sometimes stay in unsatisfying relationships.
  1. Some women endure abuse because Outcome > CLalt.
  2. They will leave only when CLalt > Outcome.
  1. The relative values of Outcome, CL, and CLalt help determine one’s willingness to disclose.
  1. Optimum disclosure will occur when both parties believe that Outcome > CLalt > CL.
  2. A relationship can be more than satisfying if it is stable, but other satisfying options are also available (in case this relationship turns sour).
  1. Ethical reflection: Epicurus’ ethical egoism.
  1. Psychological egoism reflects many social scientists’ conviction that all of us are motivated by self-interest.
  2. Ethical egoism claims we should act selfishly.
  3. Epicurus emphasized the passive pleasures of friendship, good digestion, and above all, the absence of pain.
  4. Other philosophers (Thomas Hobbes, Adam Smith, Friedrich Nietzsche, Ayn Rand) echo the Epicurean call for selfish concern.
  1. Dialectics and the environment.
  1. Altman originally thought that openness is the predominant quality of relationship changes.  The desire for privacy may counteract a unidirectional quest for intimacy.
  2. A dialectical model suggests that human social relationships are characterized by openness or contact and closedness or separateness between participants.
  3. Altman also identified the environment as a heuristic cue that might guide our decisions to disclose.
  4. Disclosing of one’s self may include both our cognitive space (our minds, thoughts) and our physical space or territory. 
  5. Sandra Petronio’s communication privacy management theory (ch. 12) maps out the intricate ways people manage boundaries around their personal information.
  1. Critique: Pulling back from social penetration.
  1. Petronio thinks it’s simplistic to equate self-disclosure with relational closeness.
  2. She also challenges the theorists’ view of disclosure boundaries as being fixed and increasingly less permeable.
  3. Natalie Pennington suggests that much of “what is discovered is passively consumed and rarely discussed” when learning about others through social media. The theory may need to be updated to account for newer communication technology.
  4. Can a complex blend of advantages and disadvantages be reliably reduced to a single index?
  5. Are people so consistently selfish that they always opt to act strictly in their own best interest?
  6. Paul Wright believes that friendships often reach a point of such closeness that self-centered concerns are no longer salient.
  7. Nevertheless, the theory has withstood the test of time with testable hypotheses and quantitative research. 

 



You can access the Outline 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.

Back to top



 

Copyright © Em Griffin 2024 | Web design by Graphic Impact