Introduction Communication is everywhere. On weekdays we may say hello to neighbors, express information, smile strangers, send texts about dinner schedule to friends. While these activities and more activities may be done on "normal" days, the analysis of this interaction can be quite complicated. Research on various communication theories will clarify why people interact in this way and help people prepare for the future communication contacts.
Cognitive disorders - conflicting understanding or emotion - cognition is to understand things through thought, discordance is discordance or conflict. This is a term widely used in psychology and its effect is very common in human relationships and communication. Conflicting body language signals sometimes can show people's attitudes and responses. Courtship - an old term of (normal) relationship between men and women, ranging from the first meeting to the outgoing relationship stage. In the ancient courtship (from the Middle Ages to the mid-20th century) a pretty formal step is mentioned that increases intimacy between men and women through intimacy, perhaps a bit of hands-on and kissing, and many outings and visits Cinema or theater sex may not last for weeks, months or years; sometimes especially if a woman comes from an elite or religiously obsessed family until the wedding night The
In the 1950s, social psychologist Leon Festinger researched cognitive dissonance in the observational study of the first final judgment cult. Festinger explains cognitive dissonance as discomfort of two contradictory ideas. In the face of inconsistent evidence, faith becomes more permanent. Cults are extreme examples of everyday phenomena. Even if you should work before the project deadline, you think you will also experience cognitive dissonance if you think you can not stop the carnival of YouTube videos. The degree of cognitive disharmony is directly related to your importance to faith
Cognitive dissonance means mental discomfort (psychological stress) experienced by people with two or more conflicting beliefs, ideas, or values. Cognitive dissonance is the result of individual behavior that violates personal beliefs, ideals, and values; it also occurs when confronted with new information that is inconsistent with beliefs, ideals, and values There is likely to be. In "Cognitive incompatibility theory" (1957), Leon Festinger argues that humans are psychologically consistent in their minds to play a psychological role in the real world. People who experience internal contradictions tend to feel psychologically uncomfortable and motivate to reduce cognitive dissonance.