Psychology, asked by bicod, 1 year ago

How can we communicate more effectively?

Answers

Answered by aagnavaagna
15
Good communication is the key to our interactions with other people. When we think of how to communicate, we often focus on spoken or written language. However, when it comes to language, it’s not just what you say, but how you say it. For example, when you speak you, by definition, must get your point across in linear fashion, meaning that the first words you utter in a sentence will guide the listener to understanding what will follow. Saying “I’m sorry “ at the beginning of a conversation will have a much greater impact, for example, then throwing your apology in at the end of a long explanation. The tone in which you speak lets your listener know whether you’re asking a question or making a statement.  However, if you’re like many people, you may find that you speak your sentences as if they were questions. This can make you sound less confident and can undercut your effectiveness when you’re trying to convince someone to believe that you know what you’re talking about. Your body language may say even more about you than your verbal language.   Most people fail to look others in the eye, slouch, jiggle their hands and feet when they’re nervous, and reveal what they’re really feeling inside through the tiny “microexpressions” on their faces. Learn to control your body language, and you can control the impression you make on others.

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Answered by shreya839
1

Answer:

hey mate, here's your answer....

There may be no topic in psychology quite as controversial, or as fascinating, as extrasensory perception, or ESP. Three posited forms of ESP are: 1. Telepathy - transfer of information from one person to another without known mediation of sensory communication, 2. Clairvoyance - acquisition of information about places, people, or events without mediation of known senses, and 3. Precognition - acquisition of information about a future event that could not be anticipated through any known processes of inference. In a study of telepathy, or psi, for example, participants are seated in two separate rooms; while one “transmits” signals, the other attempts to “receive” them. However, critics argue that many of the effects demonstrated in ESP experiments can simply be explained by faulty methodology and sensory “leakage” in which participants inadvertently give away the answers. The only "extra-sensory" feature in such cases might be that some people are very good at reading people’s very subtle signals.

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