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Communication Skills for High Stress/High Risk Situations Master Class
Dr. Vincent T. Covello Director, Center for Risk Communication New York City Tel
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Communication Skills for High Stress/High Risk Communication: Master Class
Presentation Outline Introduction/Overview Tools and Skills Resources Strategies \ HERC v 3.1 HERC Workshop Topic 1: High Impact Communication Fundamentals Jan 2004
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High Concern/Risk Communication Literature
8000 Articles in Peer Reviewed Scientific Journals 2000 Books Reviews of the Literature by Major Scientific Organizations US, National Academy of Sciences: “Improving Risk Communication” (1989) UK, Royal Society: “Risk: Analysis, Perception and Management (1992) Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Research Literature Examples
Gladwell, M., “Blink” Kahneman, D., “Thinking Fast and Slow” Covello, V. and Hyer, R, “Effective Media Communication During Public Health Emergencies ============ Lehrerer, J., “How We Think” Fisher, R., “Getting to Yes” (Ury, W., “Getting Past No”) Ekman, P., “Emotions Revealed” (Also, “Telling Lies: Clues to Deception”) Tufte, E., “Visual Explanations” Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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High Stress/High Risk Communication Literature:
Dr. Randall A. Hyer and Dr. Vincent T. Covello “Effective Media Communication During Public Health Emergencies: A World Health Organization Handbook” World Health Organization, United Nations: Geneva, April 2007 ( or Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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“Top Questions about Ebola: Simple Answers”
Dr. Vincent T Covello and Dr. Randall A. Hyer, HERC v 3.1
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FRONTAL LOBE PARIETEL LOBE OCCIPITAL LOBE TEMPORAL LOBE CEREBELLUM
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Parts of the Brain Involved in Fear Response
Amygdala Hypothalamus Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Introduction/Overview Tools and Skills Resources Strategies
Topic Outline Introduction/Overview Tools and Skills Resources Strategies HERC v 3.1 HERC Workshop Topic 1: High Impact Communication Fundamentals Jan 2004
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Communication Skills for High Stress/High Risk High Communication: Definition
A science-based approach for communicating effectively in: • high stress situations • high risk situations • low trust situations • high stakes situations • controversial situations HERC v 3.1
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High Stress/High Risk Communication Goals
Inform and Educate Build or Repair Trust Persuade and Convince Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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High Impact Communication Skills: Application Areas
High Stress/High Risk Situations Health, Safety, and Environmental Issues Cost Overruns/Project Delays/Operational Disruptions Controversial Approvals/Permissions/NIMBY / Employee Issues (e.g., complaints, bias, prejudice, discrimination) Crises, Emergencies, and Disasters Disease Outbreaks, Accidents, Emergencies Natural Hazards Other Crises (e.g., Shootings, Scandals, Sexual Abuse, Lawsuits, Protests) Organizational Change Mergers/Downsizing/Rapid Growth/Relocation/Reorganization Layoffs/Funding Cuts/Reforms Changes in Policies, Mission, Systems, or Strategic Objectives
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Three Key Messages High concern communication is a science-based discipline High concern situations change the rules of communication The key to high concern communication success is anticipation, preparation, and practice Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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FRONTAL LOBE PARIETEL LOBE OCCIPITAL LOBE TEMPORAL LOBE CEREBELLUM
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Message Preparation: Handout
“Basic Risk Communication/Message Mapping Templates” Copyright, Dr. V Covello, Center for Change/Risk Communication
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Best Practices Risk Communication/High Concern Communication Templates
(see handout) Rule of 3 Template Primacy/Recency Template 27/9/3 Template CCO Template -- 1N=3P Template -- AGL-4 Template -- TBC Template
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FRONTAL LOBE PARIETEL LOBE OCCIPITAL LOBE TEMPORAL LOBE CEREBELLUM
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HCC Literature: Example
“The Magic Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two: Some Limits on Our Capacity for Processing Information” George A. Miller (Department of Psychology, Princeton University) The Psychological Review, 1956, vol. 63, pp Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Limits of the Brain Low Stress Rule of 7 High Stress Rule of 3 27/9/3
Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Visuals
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Parts of the Brain Involved in Fear Response
Amygdala Hypothalamus Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Copyright, Dr. V Covello, Center for Change/Risk Communication
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Open House/Forum/Information Exchange
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Open House Meetings
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THEORIES, TOOLS AND TEMPLATES
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Best Practices Risk Communication Templates (see handout)
Rule of 3 Template Primacy/Recency 27/9/3 Template CCO Template 1N=3P Template IDK Template AGL-4 Template Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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HIGH CONCERN COMMUNICATION THEORIES
Trust Determination Theory Negative Dominance Theory Mental Noise Theory Risk Perception Theory
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High Concern/Risk Comm. Theories*
Trust Determination When people are stressed, they want to know that you care before they care what you know Mental Noise When people are stressed, they have difficulty processing information – hearing, understand, remembering Negative Dominance When people are stressed, they focus more on the negative than on the positive Risk Perception When people are stressed, the gap between perception and reality widens * Holding constant other variables Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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TRUST DETERMINATION THEORY
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Trust Determination Theory
When people are stressed or upset, they typically: want to know that you care before they care what you know Trust Determination Theory Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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People Want To Know That You Care Before They Care What You Know
Assessed in first 9–30 seconds Listening/ Caring/ Empathy/Compassion 50% Competence/ Expertise 15–20% All Other Factors 15–20% Honesty/ Openness 15–20% 31 31 31
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Trust Determination Theory
When people are stressed or upset, they often distrust that others are: listening, caring, empathy honest, open, hard working competent, expert Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Case Study: Walter Reed Hospital (2007)
Q: “Do you hold yourself accountable for the squalid conditions provided for wounded soldiers at Walter Reed Hospital” A: “I’m trying not to say I’m not accountable.” Q: “How could you not have known? A: “I don’t do barracks inspections at Walter Reed Hospital.” Q: “Why did you do so little?” A: “Walter Reed Hospital is not my only command.” Source: March 6, 2007, Washington Post MedCom Commander, Walter Reed Hospital General K. Kiley Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Best Practices Risk Communication Templates (see handout)
Rule of 3 Template Primacy/Recency 27/9/3 Template CCO Template 1N=3P Template IDK Template Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Case Study: BP Oil Spill (2010)
Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Case Study: BP Oil Spill (2010)
BP CEO Tony Hayward Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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BP Oil Spill (2010): BP CEO Tony Hayward
“I’m sorry. We’re sorry for the massive disruption it has caused their lives. And there is no one who wants this over more than I do. I’d like my life back.” (May 30, 2010)
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Mayor Giuliani, 9/11 “The number of casualties is more than any of us can bear ultimately.”
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Mayor Giuliani, 9/11 “The number of casualties is more than any of us can bear ultimately. And I believe we will become stronger. Stronger economically, politically, and most importantly, emotionally.”
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Mayor Giuliani, 9/11 “The number of casualties is more than any of us can bear ultimately.”
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Trust Determination Theory
Assessed in first 30 seconds Listening / Caring / Empathy 50% Competency/ Expertise Dedication/ Consistency / Commitment 15-20% 15-20% Honesty/ Openness/ Transparency 15-20% Copyright, Dr. V Covello, Center for High Concern Communication
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Credibility Ladders High Credibility Medium Credibility
MOST CREDIBLE High Credibility Medium Credibility Low Credibility LEAST CREDIBLE Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Credibility Ladder: Drug Safety/Drug Recalls (US, 2013)
Pharmacist Professor (medical research) Physician/Nurse/PhD Health Official Friend/Family member (with personal experience) Middle manager (drug manufacturer) Hired expert/consultant Company executive (pharmaceutical) MOST CREDIBLE LEAST CREDIBLE Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Credibility Transference
A lower credible source takes on the credibility of the highest credible source that agrees with its position on an issue. Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Credibility Reversal When a lower source attacks the credibility of a higher source, the lower source loses further credibility. The only information source that can effectively attack the credibility of another source is one of equal or higher credibility. Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Credibility Reversal . Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Case Study: Gulf War (1990-1991)
Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Templates: Trust Determination
CCO Template (C)ompassion (C)onviction (O)ptimism Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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MENTAL NOISE THEORY Mental Noise Theory
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Mental Noise Theory When people are stressed or upset, they typically:
have difficulty, hearing, understanding, and remembering information Mental Noise Theory Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Stress and mental noise can reduce
Mental Noise Theory 20% 100 Stress and mental noise can reduce the ability to process information by up to 80% Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Templates: Mental Noise
Rule of 3 Template Primacy/Recency Template 27/9/3 Template AGL-4 Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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27 words 9 seconds 3 messages
Template: 27/9/3 27 words 9 seconds 3 messages * Note: Words processed as phrases count as only one word Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Template: Primacy/Recency
“When people are stressed and upset, they typically focus most on that which is said first (primacy) and last (recency).” Low Stress Situations: Brain processes information based on linear order (e.g., 1, 2, 3) High Stress Situations: Brain processes information based on primacy/recency (e.g., 1, 3, 2) Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Template: Average Grade Level (AGL) Minus 4
“When people are stressed and upset, they typically process information at four grade levels below their average grade level.” Low Stress Situations: Brain processes information at AGL (average grade level) High Stress Situations: Brain processes information at AGL-4 (average grade level minus 4 grade levels) Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Non-Verbal Communication
Provide up to 75 percent of message Override verbal content Are intensely and quickly noticed Are interpreted negatively Are specific to a culture Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Resource Materials: Non-Verbal Communication
P. Ekman, “Telling Lies: Clues to Deception” P. Ekman, “Emotions Revealed” D. Morris, “Body Talk: A Dictionary of Human Gestures” Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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West Nile Message Map Haiti, 2001
Question: What can people do to protect themselves from … Remove Standing Water Wear Protective Clothing Use Insect Repellent Puddles Long Sleeves DEET Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Flower Pots/Bird Baths Long Pants 23% Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Cup of Water Dusk and Dawn Medical Research Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Haiti, 2001 Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Question: What can people do to protect themselves from …?
West Nile Virus Map: Question: What can people do to protect themselves from …? Key Message “Remove Standing Water” Key Message “Wear Protective Clothing” Key Message “Use Insect Repellent” 1.1 Puddles 2.1 Long Sleeves 3.1 DEET 1.2 Flower Pots/Bird Baths 2.2 Long Pants 3.2 23% 1.3 Cup of Water 2.3 Dusk and Dawn 3.3 Medical Research Copyright Dr. V. Covello, Center for Change/Risk Communication 59 HERC v 3.1Copyright, Dr. V Covello, Center for Change/Risk Communication HERC Workshop Topic 1: Risk Communication Fundamentals Jan 2004 1-59
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Tool: Message Mapping Strategy – 7 Steps
Identify a high concern/risk related issue or scenario Identify key stakeholders (audiences) Identify stakeholder questions and concerns Develop key messages Develop supporting information Conduct testing Plan for delivery “Most of the concerns and questions of upset or concerned people can be predicted in advance.” Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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The APP Template: Basic High Concern/Risk Communication Strategy
Anticipate Scenarios/Stakeholders/Concerns Prepare Messages/Messengers/Means Practice Drills/Exercises, Simulations/Rehearsals Copyright, Dr. V Covello, Center for Change/Risk Communication
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Stakeholder: Question or Concern
Message Map Stakeholder: Question or Concern Key Message 1 (9 words on average) Key Message 2 (9 words on average) Key Message 3 (9 words on average) Supporting Message Supporting Message Supporting Message Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Supporting Message Supporting Message Supporting Message Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Supporting Message Supporting Message Supporting Message Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Text Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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27 words 9 seconds 3 messages
Template: 27/9/3 27 words 9 seconds 3 messages * Note: Words processed as phrases count as only one word Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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NEGATIVE DOMINANCE THEORY
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Negative Dominance Theory
When people are stressed or upset, they typically: focus much more on negative information than on positive information === 1n=3p Negative Dominance Theory Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Templates: Negative Dominance
1N=3P Template IDK Template Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Nobel Prize Winner in Economics Book: “Thinking Fast and Slow“
Loss Aversion Theory Prof. D. Kahneman Nobel Prize Winner in Economics Book: “Thinking Fast and Slow“
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Negative Dominance (Loss Aversion) Theory
Negative Information Positive Information 1 Positive Information 3 Positive Information 2 Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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1 N = 3P Template Three positives for one negative =================
Avoid the words: “No, Not, Never, Nothing, None” Avoid Using Absolutes (In high stress situations: “Never say never, never say always, never use an absolute.”) Getting past “NO” (Expand the pie; win/win/interest based bargaining))
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Case Study: Walter Reed Hospital (2007)
Q: “Do you hold yourself accountable for the squalid conditions provided for wounded soldiers at Walter Reed Hospital” A: “I’m trying not to say I’m not accountable.” Q: “How could you not have known? A: “I don’t do barracks inspections at Walter Reed Hospital.” Q: “Why did you do so little?” A: “Walter Reed Hospital is not my only command.” Source: March 6, 2007, Washington Post MedCom Commander, Walter Reed Hospital General K. Kiley Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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General K. Kiley, MedCom Commander, Walter Reed, Congressional Testimony
Q.: “Do you hold yourself accountable for the squalid conditions provided for wounded soldiers at Walter Reed” A.: “I’m trying not to say I’m not accountable.” Q.: “How could you not have known? A.: “I don’t do barracks inspections at Walter Reed.” Q. “Why did you do so little?” “Walter Reed is not my only command.” Source: March 6, 2007, Washington Post
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Template: 1 Negative = 3 Positives (1N = 3P)
Balance negatives with three positives Avoid absolutes (“never say never”) Negative bias (non-verbal communication) Avoid repetitions high visual negatives Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Template: I Don’t Know (IDK)
Repeat the question (optional) Say you don’t know/can’t answer/wish you could answer Give the reason(s) why you don’t know or can’t answer the question Indicate follow up Bridge to what you can say about the issue Copyright, Dr. V Covello, Center for Change/Risk Communication
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RISK PERCEPTION THEORY
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Risk Perception Theory
When people are stressed or upset, they typically: the gap between perception and reality becomes wider look for information about trust, benefits, and control Risk Perception Theory Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Risk Perception Theory: Fear/Outrage Factors (short list)
Lower Concern/Fear Trustworthy sources Large benefits Under one’s control Voluntary Fair Natural origin Children not victims Higher Concern/Fear Untrustworthy sources Few or unclear benefits Controlled by others Involuntary Unfair Human origin Children as victims Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Templates: Risk Perception Theory
TBC Template Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Template: Trust, Benefits, Control (TBC)
Key Message 1: Trust Message Key Message 2: Benefits/Fairness Message Key Message 3: Control Message Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Risk Perception (Fear) Factors
Lower Concern/Fear Trustworthy sources Large benefits Under one’s control Higher Concern/Fear Untrustworthy sources Few or unclear benefits Controlled by others Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Risk Perception (Fear) Factors
Trust Listening/Caring Competence/Expertise Honesty/Transparency Benefits/Fairness Societal Community Personal Control/Voluntariness Choice Voice Knowledge Actions/Things for people to do Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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SPECIAL TOPICS
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Addressing Cultural Diversity
Culture: Groups who share a common: Identity Set of beliefs, values, and behaviors Definition of boundaries (e.g., what is right and wrong, proper or improper) Definition of how life is to be conducted. Discussion Points: We are first individuals not a member of a cultural group. However, there are general patterns of behaviors in groups that most of us follow. HERC v3.1
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“Iceberg” Model SEE THIS BEHAVIORS SEE LITTLE OF THIS CORE BELIEFS
VALUES CORE BELIEFS HERC v3.1
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Cultural Diversity Latino/Hispanic Risk Communication Model
High Religiosity High Family Values Strong Gender Roles Low Level of Trust in Government Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Special Topics Cultural Diversity
Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Cultural Diversity Latino/Hispanic Risk Communication Model
High Religiosity High Family Values Strong Gender Roles Low Level of Trust in Government Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Afghanistan: Values Hospitality Saving Face Honor Religion
Respect for Elders
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Afghanistan: Gestures
Avoid Using Left Hand Do not pass things or touch food with left hand Personal space (closer than In West) Do not show the bottom of your feet ===== Business cards (not widely practiced) -- Take with right hand, treat with respect -- Place in table in front of you
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Special Topics Non-verbal Communication
Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Non-Verbal Communication
Provide up to 75 percent of message Override verbal content Are intensely and quickly noticed Are interpreted negatively Are specific to a culture Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Resource Materials: Non-Verbal Communication
P. Ekman, “Telling Lies: Clues to Deception” P. Ekman, “Emotions Revealed” D. Morris, “Body Talk: A Dictionary of Human Gestures” Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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CONCLUSION/ SUMMARY
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Takeaways Three Takeaway Messages Three Takeaway Tools
Three Takeaway Inspirational Quotes Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Three Takeaway Messages
High concern communication is a science-based discipline High concern situations change the rules of communication The key to high concern communication success is anticipation, preparation, and practice Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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Three Neuroscience-Based High Stress/High Risk Communication Tools
27/9/3 Template (Rules of 3) CCO Template 1N=3P Template Copyright, Institute for High Concern Communication
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