Examples of Perception in the following topics:
-
- Informative speeches can cover many subjects as long as they can be discussed without persuading or altering the perceptions of the audience.
-
- A public speaker should turn her mental magnifying glass inward to examine the values, beliefs, attitudes, and biases that may influence her perception of others.
- When the speaker views the audience only through her mental perception, she is likely to engage in egocentrism.
-
- Whether anger, frustration, or anything else, this emotion could have a profound impact on the listener's perception of the rest of the conversation.
- The vividness effect explains how vivid or highly graphic an individual's perception of a situation.
-
- In public speaking, analogy can be a powerful linguistic tool to help speakers guide and influence the perception and emotions of the audience.
-
- Situational awareness refers to one's perception of their environment and situation around them on a moment by moment basis.
-
- Cognitive psychologist and linguistics suggest that word choice has significant framing effects on the perceptions, memories, and attitudes of speakers and listeners.
-
- Thus two people can view the same audience and come away with entirely different perceptions of it, even disagreeing about simple facts.
-
- If you communicate sincerely and honestly with the audience, you will enhance the perception of your character.
-
- In addition, the perception and use of space varies significantly across cultures and different settings within cultures.
-
- To hold the attention of the audience, a public speaker should consider three important aspects of the process of perception: readiness to perceive, selection of certain stimuli for focus of attention, and state of current awareness.