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Citations

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1. [1]

[note 1]

2. [2]

3. [3]

4. [4]

5. [5]

6. [6]

7. [7]

8. [8]

9. [9]

10. [10]

11. [11]

[note 2]

12. [12]

13. [13]

[note 3]

[note 4]

References

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  1. ^ "LSU Department of Communication Studies Faculty Biography". Retrieved 9 Feb 2021. from College of Humanities and Social Sciences, Lsu.edu
  2. ^ a b Honeycutt, J.M.; Hatcher, L. (2016). "Imagined Interactions". In Berger, C.; Roloff, M. (eds.). International Encyclopedia of Interpersonal Communication. Wiley. doi:10.1002/9781118540190.wbeic053.
  3. ^ Honeycutt, J.M. (2012). "Imagined Interactions". In Donsbach, W. (ed.). International Encyclopedia of Communication. Wiley. doi:10.1002/9781405186407.wbieci010.pub2. ISBN 9781405131995.
  4. ^ Honeycutt, J.M.; McCann, R. (2017). "Imagined Interactions". In Nussbaum, J (ed.). Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Communication. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/9780190228613.013.451.
  5. ^ Honeycutt, J.M; Rasner, R. (2017). "Physiological Arousal while Ruminating about Conflict with a Quantum Application to Relational Observation". In Floyd, K.; Weber, R. (eds.). Handbook of Communication Science and Biology. Taylor and Francis.
  6. ^ Vickery, A.J (2017). "Imagined Interactions". In Allen, M. (ed.). The SAGE Encyclopedia of Communication Research Methods. SAGE. pp. 684–687. doi:10.4135/9781483381411.n241. ISBN 9781483381428.
  7. ^ Floyd, K.; Affifi, T. (2011), "Biological and Physiological Perspectives on Interpersonal Communication", in Knapp, M.; Daly, J. (eds.), The SAGE Handbook of Interpersonal Communication (4th ed.), Sage, p. 791, ISBN 978-1412974745
  8. ^ Honeycutt, James (2014), "Ch.11:Imagined Interactions", in Berger, C. (ed.), Interpersonal Communication, De Gruyter Mouton, p. 726, ISBN 9783110276794
  9. ^ Honeycutt, J.H. (2014), "Chapter 6: Imagined Interaction Theory: Mental Representation of Interpersonal Communication", in Braithwaite, D.; Schrodt, P. (eds.), Engaging Theories in Interpersonal Communication: Multiple Perspectives, SAGE, p. 472, ISBN 9781483310138
  10. ^ Adler, R.; Proctor, R. (2017). Looking Out, Looking In (15th ed.). Cengage Learning. p. 156. ISBN 9781305855656.
  11. ^ a b West, R.; Turner, L. (2019). Interpersonal Communication (4th ed.). SAGE. pp. ch9.268, ch10.307. ISBN 978-1544336664.
  12. ^ Honeycutt, J.M. (20 Dec 2002). Imagined Interactions: Daydreaming about Communication (1st ed.). Hampton Press. ISBN 1-57273-413-2.
  13. ^ a b c "GS profile, James M. Honeycutt". scholar.google.com. Retrieved 9 Feb 2021.

Notes

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  1. ^ Full text available from author here. [2]
  2. ^ This undergraduate text uses simplified language. Ch.10 refers to "imagined conversations", citing Honeycutt's imagined interactions research (endnote 21). Ch.9 indicates "some research suggests that serial conflicts persist when people rehearse interactions in their minds prior to engaging in them," citing Honeycutt's II conflict-linkage research (endnote 6).[11]
  3. ^ GS lists 143, but the actual number is probably slightly lower, as a few publications appear to be erroneous. e.g., see note below. [13]
  4. ^ GS erroneously lists 4398, which is 1000 citations too high due to inclusion of the (Hargie, 2010) textbook. [13]