Sandi W. Smith (Ph.D., University of Southern California) is Professor in the Department of Communication at Michigan State University, where she teaches courses in persuasion, communication theory, and interpersonal communication, and Director of the Health and Risk Communication Center. Her research interests parallel these course topics, and her research has been funded by foundations and government agencies such as the Kaiser Family Foundation, the Fetzer Institute, the U. S. Department of Education, and the National Cancer Institute. In specific, she has focused her research on the impact of memorable messages received from important others on health behaviors; persuading people to carry signed and witnessed organ donor cards and to engage in family discussion about their decisions related to organ donation; encouraging college students to consume alcohol moderately, if at all; and the portrayal of interpersonal relationships on television. Among her more than sixty publications are articles that appeared in Communication Monographs, Human Communication Research, Health Communication, Journal of Health Communication, Journal of Communication, and the Journal of Applied Communication Research, among others. She is active in the National Communication Association and the International Communication Association where she served as Chair of the Interpersonal Communication Division. She has received honors for her teaching and research from student groups, professional associations, and the universities at which she has worked. In 2007, she was honored with the Distinguished Faculty Award at Michigan State University, and in 2008 she received the B. Aubrey Fisher Mentorship Award from ICA. Steven R. Wilson (Ph.D., Purdue University) is Professor in the Department of Communication at Purdue University. He also has been a faculty member at Michigan State, Northern Illinois, and Northwestern Universities. His research and teaching focus on interpersonal communication, social influence, and aggression/conflict. He is the author of Seeking and Resisting Compliance: Why Individuals Say What They Do When Trying to Influence Others (Sage, 2002), for which he received the Gerald R. Miller book award from the National Communication Association's interpersonal communication division in 2005. He also has published more than 50 articles and chapters in communication journals such as Communication Monographs, Communication Research, and Human Communication Research, interdisciplinary journals such as Child Abuse & Neglect, Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, and Journal of Language and Social Psychology, and edited volumes such as the Handbook of Communication and Social Interaction Skills and the Handbook of Communication Science (2nd ed.). His recent research explores patterns of parent-child interaction in families at risk for child maltreatment as well as patterns associated with children's school readiness (funded by the Lilly Endowment). He is active in both the National Communication Association and the International Communication Association, and has served as chair of the interpersonal communication division for both associations. From 2001-2003, he served as one of five associate editors of the interdisciplinary journal Personal Relationships. In 2008, he was honored with the Bernard Brommel Award for Outstanding Scholarship or Distinguished Service in Family Communication from NCA.
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Foreword: Commentary on New Directions in Interpersonal Communication - Michael E. Roloff 1. Evolving Trends in Interpersonal Communication Research - Sandi W. Smith and Steven R. Wilson PART I. METATHEORETICAL APPROACHES TO INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION RESEARCH 2. Evolutionary Perspectives on Interpersonal Relationships - Ascan F. Koerner and Kory Floyd 3. Relational Dialectics Theory, Applied - Leslie A. Baxter and Dawn O. Braithwaite PART II. BASIC INTERPERSONAL PROCESSES 4. Relational Uncertainty and Interpersonal Communication - Leanne K. Knobloch 5. Uncertainty and Information Management in Interpersonal Contexts - Walid A. Afifi 6. Turbulence in Relational Transitions - Denise Haunani Solomon, Kirsten M. Weber, and Keli Ryan Steuber 7. Workplace Relationships and Membership Negotiation - Karen K. Myers PART III. THE LIGHT AND DARK SIDES OF INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION 8. Explaining Recipient Responses to Supportive Messages: Development and Tests of a Dual-Process Theory - Brant R. Burleson 9. Toward a Communication Theory of the Demand/Withdraw Pattern of Interaction in Interpersonal Relationships - John P. Caughlin and Allison M. Scott 10. Advances in Deception Detection - Judee K. Burgoon and Timothy R. Levine 11. Hurtful Communication: Current Research and Future Directions - Anita L. Vangelisti and Alexa D. Hampel PART IV. RELATIONSHIPS, MEDIA, AND CULTURE 12. Culture and Interpersonal Relationships - Kristine L. Fitch 13. New Technologies and New Directions in Online Relating - Joseph B. Walther and Artemio Ramirez, Jr. 14. Interpersonal Relationships on Television: A Look at Three Key Attributes - Stacy L. Smith and Amy Granados
Much of the success of New Directions stems from the editors' selection of strong contributors. These are definitely the people to be reading. Perhaps more important, the editors asked contributors to tell the story of their research by addressing basic questions on the origins of their work, the methods they used, their most important findings and challenges, and the directions they and other might take the work in the future. The result is a book that is at once more engaging than recent encyclopedias and handbooks and more substantive than recent textbooks surveying theories of interpersonal communication. In my view New Directions offers the best graduate/professional level introduction to the field of interpersonal communication currently available. It is compact, accessible, and authoritative. -- Journal of Communication "Books, particularly edited volumes, rarely succeed in expressing either a sense of history or a clear vision of the discipline's leading edge. New Directions in Interpersonal Communication Research, succeeds at both." -- Malcolm Parks