Last Revised: Dec

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Last Revised: April 2010

ACADEMIC BIOGRAPHY

Michael T. Motley

DATE OF BIRTH: 1/4/45

ADDRESS: HOME: 512 Citadel OFFICE: Dept. of Communication

Davis, CA 95616 University of California at Davis

Davis, CA 95616

PHONE: (530) 756-6462 (530) 752-1223

MARITAL STATUS: Married

HEALTH: Excellent

EDUCATION BACKGROUND

DATES INSTITUTION DEGREE CONFERRED

1962-1965

1965-1967

1967-1970

EMPLOYMENT

University of Texas

University of Texas

Pennsylvania State University

B.A. (Speech Communication)

M.A. (Speech Communication)

Ph.D. (Communication)

DATES POSITION INSTITUTION

1964-1967

1967 &1968

1967-1970

1970-1971

1971-1977

1977-1982

1982-1985

1985-

Teaching Asst.

Instructor

Assistant Professor

Asst. & Assoc. Prof.

Assoc. Prof.

University of Texas

Research Assoc. " " "

Pennsylvania State University

California State University, Fresno

California State Univ., Los Angeles

Ohio State University

Assoc. Professor University of California at Davis

Professor " " " " "

ADMINISTRATIVE EXPERIENCE

1975-77, Chair, Communication Area, Department of Speech Communication (Communication,

Speech Pathology, Drama), California State University, Los Angeles

1986 -91, Chair, Department of Rhetoric and Communication, University of California at Davis

1999-'02, Chair, Department of Communication, University of California at Davis

HONORS

- Recognized as among “‘Top 1%’ of Scholars in Communication during the ‘70’s and ‘80’s,” Eastern

States Comm. Assn., 1987.

- Recognized as among “Top 1%” of Active Scholars in Communication; Miami University, and

Communication Education , 1993.

- "Top Three" Honors, Speech and Language Sciences Division, Speech Communication Assn.

Convention papers; 1976, 1978, 1980, 1981

- "Top Three" Honors, Interpersonal Communication Division, Speech Communication Assn.

Convention papers; 1991

- “Top Four” Honors, Pedagogy Division, Speech Communication Assn. Convention papers; 1995, 2009

- "Top Three" Honors, Information Systems Division, International Communication Assn.

Convention papers; 1978, 1983

- "Top Three" Honors, Language Behavior Interest Group, Western Speech Communication Assn.

Convention papers; 1981, 1986, 1989

- Recipient, Social and Behavioral Sciences Research Fellow Award, Ohio State University, 1978.

- Recipient, B. Aubrey Fisher Award (Best Article), Western Speech Communication Association, 1987

(for Motley, "Consciousness and Intention . . . ," WJSC, 1986).

- Recipient, B. Aubrey Fisher Award (Best Article), Western States Communication Association, 1991 (for

Motley, "On Whether...," WJSC, 1990).

- Runnerup, B. Aubrey Fisher Award, 1988 (for Motley & Camden, “Facial Expression of

Emotion...,” WJSC, 1988).

- Distinguished Article Award, Applied Communication Division, SCA, 1996, for Motley & Reeder,

“Unwanted Escalation . . .”

- W.N. Thompson Memorial Lecturer, Western Illinois University, 1993.

- Visiting Professor, Ohio State University, 1976.

- Visiting Professor, San Diego State University, 1991.

MEMBERSHIPS

Speech Communication Association

Western Speech Communication Association

International Communication Association

American Association for the Advancement of Science

PRIMARY TEACHING AREAS

Interpersonal Communication

Language Behavior

Language and Cognition

Empirical Research Methods

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE

OFFICES AND COMMITTEES

American Association for the Advancement of Science

SCA Representative, Psychology Division, 1981-84

Speech Communication Association / National Communication Association

Secretary, Speech Sciences Division, 1972-73, 1973-74

Vice Chair Elect, Speech Sciences Division,. 1974-75

Vice Chair, Speech and Language Sciences Division, 1975-76

Chair, Speech and Language Sciences Division, 1976-77

Member, Legislative Council, 1977, 1978

Member, Nominating Committee, Rhetorical and Communication Theory

Division, 1974-75

Chair, Nominating Committee, Speech and Language Sciences Division, 1977-78

Editorial Board, Proteus, 1974-76

Editorial Board, ERIC, 1975-86

Associate Editor, Communication Monographs, 1988-91

Western Speech Communication Association

Chair, Language Behavior Interest Group, 1974-75, 1975-76

Member, Legislative Assembly, 1975, 1976, 1988, 1989

Chair, State Membership Committee, 1976

Associate Editor, Western Journal of Speech Communication, 1985-92

Guest Editor, Western Journal of Speech Communication, 1986 Special Section

Delegate at Large, Legislative Assembly, 1988

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE (contd.)

OFFICES AND COMMITTEES (contd.)

Society for Cognition and Brain Theory

Member, Steering Committee, 1981-84

Eastern Communication Association

Editorial Board, Communication Quarterly, 1979-81

Associate Editor, Communication Quarterly, vol. 29:1, 1981

Associate Editor, Communication Quarterly, 1982-84

International Communication Association

Associate Editor, Communication Yearbook, 1984

Associate Editor, Human Communication Research, 1986-91

REFEREE

Communication Monographs; 1981,1982 (2), 1983 (2), 1984 (3), 1985 (3), 1993, 1994, 1995,

2000

Journal of Broadcasting; 1980, 1981, 1982

Western Journal of Speech Communication; 1973, 1974 (2), 1975, 1976, 1978, 1981

(4), 1982 (2), 1983 (6), 1984 (11), 1984 (19), 1997 (1), 2001, 2002

Communication Quarterly; 1979 (9), 1980 (10), 1981 (21), 1983 (5), 1998, 2001

Southern Speech Journal; 1977, 1981, 1988

Psychological Review; 1985

Cognition; 2008, 2009, 2010

National Science Foundation; 1985, 1986, 1989, 1990, 1992

St. Martin’s Press, 1990, 1992

Journal of Language and Social Psychology, 1993, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2008

Communication Studies, 1992, 2000

Communication Research, 1992, 1995, 1999

Guggenheim Foundation, 1989

Burgess Publishers, 1988, 1989

Journal of Social Behavior and Personality, 1989, 2001

Dimension Series, Speech Communication Association; 1974, 1978

Speech and Language Sciences Division, SCA/NCA; 1975, 1976, 1977, 1983, 1999

Language Behavior Interest Group, WSCA; 1975, 1976, 1977, 1993

Information Systems Division, International Communication Association; 1983

Wadsworth Publishers, 1992, 1994, 2001

Mayfield Publishing, 1995, 1996, 2000

CONVENTION PANEL CHAIR AND/OR CRITIC

Speech Communication Assn. / National Communication Assn; 1972, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978,

1980, 1985, 1992, 19955, 2002, 2006, 2009, 2010

Western Speech Communication Association; 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1992,1993, 1994

International Communication Association; 1984

PUBLICATIONS -- MICHAEL T. MOTLEY

(Peer Reviewed Unless Otherwise Noted)

1. 1973 Motley, M.T. An analysis of spoonerisms as psycholinguistic phenomena.

Speech Monographs 40 :66-71.

2.

3.

1974 Motley, M.T. Acoustic correlates of lies. Western Speech 38 :81-87.

1974 Motley, M.T. Verbal conditioning-generalization in encoding: A hint at the structure of the lexicon. Speech Monographs 41 :152-162.

4. 1974 Baars, B.J. and M.T. Motley. Spoonerisms: Experimental elicitation of human speech errors . Catalog of Selected Documents in Psychology 4 :118.

5. 1974 Baars, B.J. and M.T. Motley. The artificial induction of spoonerisms. In

Proceedings of the Milwaukee Symposium on Automatic Control and Autonomous

Computing (Milwaukee: University of Wisconsin Robotics and Artificial

Intelligence Laboratory) 304-310.

6. 1975 Baars, B.J., M.T. Motley, and D. G. MacKay. Output editing for lexical status in artificially elicited slips of the tongue . Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal

Behavior 14 :382-391.

7. 1975 Motley, M.T. and B. J. Baars. Encoding sensitivities to phonological markedness and transitional probability: Evidence from spoonerisms. Human

Communication Research 2 :353-361.

8. 1975 Motley, M.T. Polysyllabic rhetorical covariates and other neglected areas of study . Today's Speech 23 :1-2.

9. 1976 Motley, M.T. Stage fright manipulation by (false) heart rate feedback . Central

States Speech Journal 27 :186-191.

10. 1976 Baars, B.J. and M.T.Motley. Spoonerisms as sequencer conflicts: Evidence from artificially elicited errors. American Journal of Psychology 89 :467-484.

11. 1976 Motley, M.T. and B.J. Baars. Laboratory induction of verbal slips: A new method for psycholinguistic research. Communication Quarterly 24 :28-34.

12. 1976 Motley, M.T. and B.J. Baars. Semantic bias effects on the outcome of verbal slips. Cognition 4 :177-187.

13. 1976 Wright C.R., M.T. Motley, and J.G. Phelan. Discrimination of dialect from temporal patterns of the speech signal . Psychological Reports 38 :1059-1067.

14. 1978 Motley, M.T. Orientations to language and communication . (Palo Alto: Science

Research Associates).

15. 1978 Motley, M.T. and B.J. Baars. Laboratory verification of 'Freudian' slips of the tongue as evidence of prearticulatory semantic editing. In Brent Rubin (Ed.),

Communication Yearbook II (New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction), 141-152.

PUBLICATIONS Contd.

16. 1979 Motley, M.T. and B. J. Baars. Effects of cognitive set upon laboratory induced verbal (Freudian ) slips. Journal of Speech and Hearing Research 22 :421-432.

17. 1979 Motley, M.T., C.T. Camden, and B.J. Baars. Personality and situational influences upon verbal slips: A laboratory test of Freudian and prearticulatoryediting hypotheses. Human Communication Research 5 :195-202.

18. 1980 Motley, M.T. Verification of 'Freudian slips' and semantic prearticulatory editing via laboratory-induced spoonerisms. In V.A. Fromkin, (Ed.) Errors in Linguistic

Performance: Slips of the Tongue, Ear, Pen, and Hand (New York: Academic

Press), 133-147.

19. 1981 Motley, M.T., C. T. Camden, and B. J.Baars. Toward verifying the assumptions of laboratory-induced slips of the tongue: The output-error and editing issues.

Human Communication Research 8 :3-15.

20. 1981 Motley, M.T., B.J.Baars, and C.T. Camden. Syntactic criteria in prearticulatory editing: Evidence from laboratory-induced slips of the tongue. Journal of

Psycholinguistic Research 5 :503-522.

21. 1981 Motley,M.T. A linguistic analysis of glossolalia: Evidence of unique psycholinguistic processing. Communication Quarterly 30 :18-27.

22. 1982 Camden, C.T., M.T. Motley, and B. J. Baars. Cognitive encoding processes:

Evidence for a graphemically based short-term memory. Human Communication

Research 8 :327-337.

23. 1982 Camden, C.T. and M.T. Motley. Synonymous rhymes: Stimuli for psycholinguistic research. Catalogue of Selected Documents in Psychology 12 :7.

24. 1982 Motley, M.T., C. T, Camden, and B. J. Baars. Covert formulation and editing of anomalies in speech production: Evidence from experimentally elicited slips of the tongue. Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior 21 :578-594.

25. 1983 Motley, M.T., Baars, B.J., and Camden, C.T. Experimental verbal slip studies: A review and an editing model of language encoding. Communication Monographs

50 :79-101.

26. 1983 Motley, M.T., C.T. Camden, and B.J. Baars. Polysemantic lexical access.

Evidence from laboratory induced double entendres. Communication

Monographs 50 -193-205.

27. 1983 Motley, M.T., B. J. Baars, and C. T. Camden. Formulation hypotheses revisited:

A reply to Stemberger. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 12 :561-565.

28. 1984 Camden, C.T., M.T. Motley, and A. Wilson. White lies in interpersonal communication: A taxonomy and (preliminary) investigation of social motivations.

Western Journal of Speech Communication. 48 :309-325.

PUBLICATIONS Contd.

29. 1985 Camden, C.T., H. Mims, and M.T. Motley. Convergent validity of three communication data collection techniques: An analysis of Black American

English grammatical usage. Western Journal of Speech Communication 49 :166-

176

30. 1985 Motley, M.T. and C.T. Camden. Nonlinguistic influences on lexical selection:

Evidence from double entendres. Communication Monographs 52 :124-135.

31. 1985 Motley, M.T. Slips of the tongue. Scientific American. 253 :116-126.

32. 1986 Motley, M.T. Consciousness and intention in communication: A preliminary model and methodological approaches. Western Journal of Speech

Communication 50 :3-23. (This article won the B. Aubrey Fisher Award as the best paper in Western Journal of Speech Communication during 1986.)

33. 1986 Motley, M.T. The production of verbal slips and double entendres as clues to the efficiency of normal speech production. Journal of Language and Social

Psychology 4 :275-293.

34. 1986 Motley, M.T. Common flaws in contemporary empirical communication research. Western Journal of Speech Communication 50 :296-304.

35. 1986 Motley, M.T. On replicating the slip technique: A reply to Sinsabaugh &Fox.

Communication Monographs 53 :342-351.

36. 1987 Motley, M.T. What I meant to say. Psychology Today 21 (2):24-28.

37. 1987 Motley, M.T. "Strip Charter" -- A microcomputer program to quantify psychophysiological and other strip-chart data. Western Journal of Speech

Communication 51 :78-99.

38. 1988 Motley, M.T. Slips of the tongue. In Erik Barnow, Ed., International

Encyclopedia of Communications . Oxford University Press. (Invited)

39. 1988 Motley, M.T. Taking the terror out of talk. Psychology Today 22 .l:46-49

40. 1988 Motley, M.T. & C.T. Camden. Facial expression of emotion: A comparison of posed versus spontaneous expressions in an interpersonal-communication setting.

Western Journal of Speech Communication 52 :1-22.

41. 1989 Motley, M.T. and N.L. Smith. Effects of temperament upon hiring decisions: A preliminary examination of global personality traits and communicator compatibility. Communication Reports 2 :22-29.

42. 1990 Motley, M.T. Public speaking anxiety qua performance anxiety: A revised model and an alternative therapy. Journal of Social Behavior and Personality 5 :85-104.

43. 1990 Motley, M.T. On whether one can(not) not communicate: An examination via traditional communication postulates. Western Journal of Speech Communication

54 :1-20.

PUBLICATIONS Contd.

44. 1990 Motley, M.T. Communication as Interaction: A Reply to Beach and

Bavelas. Western Journal of Speech Communication 54 (4):613-623.

45. 1991 Motley, M.T. How one may not communicate: A reply to Andersen.

Communication Studies 42 :326-339.

46. 1991 Motley, M.T. Public speaking anxiety qua performance anxiety: A revised model and an alternative therapy. In M. Booth-Butterfield (Ed.) Communication,

Cognition, and Anxiety (Newbury Park: Sage), 85-104. (#42 reprinted).

47. 1992 Motley, M.T. Mindfulness in solving communicators' dilemmas.

Communication Monographs 59 :306-314.

48. 1993 Motley, M.T. Facial affect and verbal context in conversation: Facial expression as interjection. Human Communication Research 20 :3-40.

49. 1994 Motley, M.T. and Molloy, J.L. An efficacy test of a new therapy

(“communication-oriented-motivation”) for public-speaking anxiety. Journal of

Applied Communication Research, 22 , 48-58.

50. 1995 Motley, M.T. Overcoming Your Fear of Public Speaking--A Proven Method.

San Francisco : McGraw-Hill.

51. 1995 Motley, M.T. and Reeder, H.M., Unwanted escalation of sexual intimacy:

Male and female perceptions of connotations and relational consequences of resistance messages, Communication Monographs, 62 , 356-382.

52. 1997 Motley, M.T. COM therapy. In Daly, McCrosky, Ayres et al. (Eds.) Avoiding

Communication, 2 nd edition, Hampton Press, 379-400.

53. 1997 Motley, M.T. Overcoming Your Fear of Public Speaking-A Proven Method.

New York: Houghton Mifflin.

54. 1999 Osborn, S. and Motley, M.T

. Improving Communication , New York: Houghton

Mifflin.

55. 1999 Motley, M.T. Improving Communication: Instructor’s Resource Manual . New

York: Houghton Mifflin. (Invited)

56. 2002 Motley, M.T. Theory of slips. In E. Erwin (Ed.), The Freud Encyclopedia:

Theory, Therapy, and Culture. London: Routledge. (Invited)

57. 2002 Motley, M.T. and Molloy, J.L. An efficacy test of a new therapy

“communication-oriented-motivation”) for public-speaking anxiety. In P.

McCarthy & C. Hatcher (Eds.), Speaking Persuasively: How to be Effective in

Organizations . Brisbane, Australia: Allen & Unwin (Reprint of #49)

58. 2004 Motley, M.T. COM Therapy. In J. Daly, J.C. McCrosky, J. Ayres, T. Hopf, & D.

Ayres (Eds.), Avoiding Communication , 3 rd edition, Cresskill, NJ:Hampton Press

(Reprint or #52).

PUBLICATIONS Contd.

59. 2005 Motley, M.T. (Deceiving research subjects ethically). Journal of Applied

Communication Research, 33 :3.

60. 2008 Motley, M.T. (Ed.) Studies in Applied Interpersonal Communication.

Boston:

60a.

Sage Publishing.

Introduction

61. 2008 Motley, M.T., Faulkner, L. and Reeder, H.M. Conditions that determine the fate of friendships after unrequited romantic disclosures. In Motley, M.T. (Ed.),

Studies in Applied Interpersonal Communication . Boston: Sage Publishing, 27-

50.

62. 2008 Motley, M.T., Reeder, H.M. and Faulkner, L. Behaviors that determine the fate of friendships after unrequited romantic disclosures. In Motley, M.T. (Ed.),

Studies in Applied Interpersonal Communication . Boston: Sage Publishing, 71-

93

63. 2008 Motley, M.T. Verbal coercion to unwanted sexual intimacy: How coercion operates. In Motley, M.T. (Ed.), Studies in Applied Interpersonal

Communication . Boston: Sage Publishing, 185-203.

64 2008 Motley, M.T. Unwanted escalation of sexual intimacy: Pursuing a miscommunication explanation. In Motley, M.T. (Ed.), Studies in Applied

Interpersonal Communication.

Boston: Sage Publishing, 121-143.

65. 2012 Motley, M.T. (Ed.) Forensic Communication: Applications of Communication

Research to Issues of Courtroom Litigation.

Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press.

66. 2012 Motley, M.T. Meaning and interpretation of messages as a common litigation issue. In Motley, M.T. (Ed.) Forensic Communication: Applications of

Communication Research to Issues of Courtroom Litigation.

Cresskill, NJ:

Hampton Press.

68. 2012 Motley, M.T. Expert opinions as empirically testable hypotheses. In Motley,

M.T. (Ed.) Forensic Communication: Applications of Communication Research to Issues of Courtroom Litigation.

Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press.

69. 2012 Motley, M.T. Advice for the novice expert witness in communication. In

Motley, M.T. (Ed.) Forensic Communication: Applications of Communication

Research to Issues of Courtroom Litigation.

Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press.

PAPERS PRESENTED

Michael T. Motley

(Competitively Selected Unless Otherwise Indicated)

1. 1967 Motley, M.T. and L. W. Carlile. A biotelemetric study of heart rate before, during, and after public speaking. Speech Association of America, San Francisco;

December.

2. 1969 Motley, M.T. An analysis of spoonerisms as encoding phenomena.

Communication Association of America, Chicago; December.

3. 1972 Motley. M.T. Acoustic correlates of lies. Western Speech Communication

Association, Honolulu; November.

4. 1972 Motley, M.T. Spoonerisms: A contribution to phonological encoding theory.

Western Speech Communication Association, Honolulu; November.

5. 1972 Motley, M.T. Verbal conditioning in encoding. Speech Communication

Association, Chicago; December.

6. 1973 Motley, M.T. The role of psycholinguistics in communication theory. Western

Speech Communication Association, Albuquerque; November.

7. 1973 Motley, M.T. and B.J. Baars. The generation of verbal slips under laboratory conditions: New developments and theoretical implications. Speech

Communication Association, New York; November.

8. 1974 Baars, B.J. and M.T. Motley. The artificial induction of spoonerisms. Milwaukee

Symposium on Automatic Control and Autonomous Computing, Milwaukee;

March.

9. 1974 Motley, M.T. Stage fright reduction by (false) heart rate feedback. Western

Speech Communication Association, Newport; November.

10. 1974 Motley, M.T. and G.A. Borden. Cloze- procedure: What does it really measure.

Speech Communication Association, Chicago; December.

11. 1974 Motley, M.T. Toward an analysis of language encoding by the deaf via laboratory-generated encoding errors. The Salk Institute, La Jolla; March.

(invited)

Papers Presented continued: Michael T. Motley

12. 1974 Baars, B.J., M.T. Motley, and D.G. MacKay. Output editing of artificially elicited slips of the tongue. Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago; May.

13. 1975 Motley, M.T. and B.J. Baars. Laboratory induction of verbal slips: A new methodology for psycholinguistic research. Western Speech Communication

Association, Seattle; November.

14. 1975 Motley, M.T. and B.J. Baars. Toward a model of integrated editing processes in prearticulatory encoding: Evidence from laboratory generated verbal slips.

Speech Communication Association, Houston; December.

15. 1975 Motley, M.T. Selected linguistic analyses of glossolalia. Speech Communication

Association, Houston; December.

16. 1976 Baars, B.J. and M.T. Motley. Interaction effects: Semantic bias and verbal

(Freudian) slips. Western Psychological Association, Los Angeles; April.

17. 1976 Wright, C.R., M.T. Motley, and J.G. Phelan. Dialectal discrimination on the basis of temporal patterns of the speech signal. Western Psychological Association, Los

Angeles; April.

18. 1976 Motley, M.T. and B.J. Baars. Competing plans and prearticulatory editing:

Toward a theory of phonological encoding. Western Speech Communication

Association, San Francisco; November.

19. 1976 Motley, M.T. and B.J. Baars. Effects of cognitive set upon laboratory induced verbal (Freudian) slips. Speech Communication Association, San

Francisco; December

20. 1977 Motley, M.T. Semantic influences of the outcome of speech errors: A laboratory verification of 'Freudian' slips. International Congress of Linguists, Vienna,

Austria; September.

21. 1977 Motley, M.T. Reflections upon contemporary communication/language research:

(Introducing) the fixed-effect fallacy and a plea for pragmatic research. Speech

Communication Association, Washington; November.

22. 1978 Motley, M.T. and B.J. Baars. Laboratory verification of ‘Freudian' slips of the tongue as evidence of prearticulatory semantic editing. International

Communication Association, Chicago; April.

Papers Presented continued: Michael T. Motley

23. 1978 Motley, M.T., C.T. Camden, and B.J. Baars. Personality influences upon outcomes of speech errors: A direct test of Freudian versus prearticulatory-editing explanations of laboratory generated verbal slips. Speech Communication

Association, Minneapolis; November.

24. 1979 Motley, M.T., C.T. Camden, and B.J. Baars. Syntactic criteria in prearticulatory editing: Evidence from laboratory-induced verbal slips. International

Communication Association, Philadelphia; May.

25. 1979 Motley, M.T., C.T. Camden, and B.J. Baars. Static and contextual criteria in prearticulatory editing. Speech Communication Association, San Antonio;

November.

26. 1980 Motley, M.T., C.T. Camden, B.J. Baars, C.J. Zahn, and S.S. Mura. On verifying the assumptions of artificially-induced verbal slips: The output-error and editing issues. Speech Communication Association, New York; November.

27. 1981 Camden, C.T. and M.T. Motley. Word recognition processes: Evidence from laboratory-induced slips ofthe tongue. Western Speech Communication

Association, San Jose; February.

28. 1981 Motley, M.T., and B.J. Baars. Consciousness and communication: On studying intentions. Eastern Communication Association, Pittsburgh; April.

29. 1981 Motley, M.T., C.T. Camden, and B.J. Baars. Toward a critical test of psycholinguistic editing and other assumptions of laboratory verbal slip studies.

International Communication Association, Minneapolis; May.

30. 1981 Camden, C.T. and M.T. Motley. Word recognition processes: Evidence from laboratory-induced spoonerisms.International Communication Association,

Minneapolis; May.

31. 1981 Motley, M.T., C.T. Camden, and B.J. Baars. Editing of potential anomalies in speech output: Evidence from (partial) spoonerisms. Speech Communication

Association, Anaheim; November.

32. 1981 Mura, S.S. and M.T. Motley. An investigation into the effects of gender and relative status on the use of deferential language style features. Speech

Communication Associates, Anaheim; November.

33. 1981 Baars, B.J. and M.T. Motley. Evidence for anticipatory editing in speech production. Psychonomic Society, Philadelphia; November.

Papers Presented continued: Michael T. Motley

34. 1982 Motley, M.T., C.T. Camden, B.J. Baars, and M.E. Mattson. Sexual double entendres as evidence of polysemantic lexical access. International

Communication Association, Boston; April.

35. 1982 Motley, M.T. Empirical (psycholinguistic) research in communication: Science or criticism (or sham)? Speech Communication Association, Louisville; November.

36. 1982 Motley, M.T., C.T. Camden, and B.J. Baars. Polysemantic lexical access:

Evidence from laboratory-induced (via ROPJ) double entendres. Speech

Communication Association, Louisville; November.

37. 1982 Camden, C.T., M.T. Motley, and A. Wilson. The case for deception in interpersonal communication. Interpersonal Communication and Beyond,

Colorado Springs; August.

38. 1983 Camden, C.T., M.T. Motley, and A Wilson. Deception in interpersonal communication: The white lie. Western Speech Communication Association,

Albuquerque; February.

39. 1983 Camden, C.T., M.T. Motley, and A. Wilson. Social implications of deception.

International Communication Association, Dallas; May.

40. 1983 Motley, M.T., B.J.Baars, and C.T. Camden. Experimental verbal slip studies: A review and a modified language encoding model. International Communication

Association, Dallas; May.

41. 1983 Motley, M.T., B.J. Baars, and C.T. Camden. Mechanisms for avoiding overt errors in speech: The case of sentential violations of semantic rules. Speech

Communication Association, Washington; November.

42. 1984 Camden, C.T., M.T. Motley, and H.A. Mims. Convergent validity of three data collection techniques: An analysis of Black English grammatical usage. Western

Speech Communication Association, Seattle; February.

43. 1984 Motley, M.T. and C.T. Camden. Nonlinguistic influences on lexical selection:

Evidence from double entendres. Speech Communication Association, Chicago;

November.

44. 1984 Mattson, M.E., B.J. Baars, and M.T. Motley. Wrapping up the case against purely top-down models of speech production: Evidence from induced slips of the tongue. Eastern Psychological Association, Boston; March.

Papers Presented continued: Michael T. Motley

45. 1985 Motley, M.T. Communication, intention, and consciousness: A cognitive approach. Western Speech Communication Association, Fresno; February.

46. 1985 Motley, M.T. Cognitive antecedents of verbal slips and double entendres. UCSB

Department of Communication Guest Lecture Series, Santa Barbara; March.

(invited)

47. 1985 Motley, M.T. Laboratory double entendres as evidence of nonlinguistic and polysemantic influences on lexical selection. American Association for the

Advancement of Science, Los Angeles; May.

48. 1985 Motley, M.T. Common flaws in contemporary interpersonal communication research. Speech Communication Association, Denver; November. (Pub. #34)

49. 1986 Motley, M.T. Causes of slips and double entendres: Clues to the efficiency of normal speech production. Western Speech Communication Association, Tucson;

February.

50. 1986 Motley, M.T., and C.T. Camden. Identifiability of facial expressions of emotion:

A comparison of posed and natural behaviors. American Association for the

Advancement of Science, Philadelphia; May.

51. 1986 Motley, M.T., C.T. Camden, S. Boyd, R.J. Richards, C.M. Reuter, and C. Reed.

Facial expression of emotion: A comparison of intentional and unintentional displays. Speech Communication Association, Chicago; November.

52. 1986 Motley, M.T. Consciousness and performance: The issue of communicative intention. Speech Communication Association, Chicago; November.

53. 1986 Motley, M.T. Cognitive etiology of slips of the tongue and double entendres.

Lecture to Linguistics Graduate Group, UC Berkeley; November. (invited)

54. 1987 Motley, M.T. Future directions for communication research: The language area.

Western Speech Communication Association, Salt Lake City; February

55. 1987 Motley, M.T. Some thoughts on maturity in communication research. Eastern

Communication Association, Syracuse; May. (invited)

56. 1987 Motley, M.T. The Editor's Perspective: Western Journal of Communication.

Eastern Communication Association, Syracuse, May. (invited)

57. 1987 Motley, M.T. On whether one can(not) not communicate: A sender-oriented perspective. International Communication Association, Montreal.

Papers Presented continued: Michael T. Motley

58. 1987 Motley, M.T. A response to the top four papers in interpersonal and small group communication. Speech Communication Association, Boston. (invited)

59. 1987 Motley, M.T. A response to papers on the "Cognitive Processes Underlying

Communicative Forms" panel. Speech Communication Association, Boston.

(invited)

60. 1988 Motley, M.T. Understanding the Nature of Stage Fright as the Key to Stage Fright

Reduction. Western Speech Communication Association, San Diego.

61. 1988 Motley, M.T. Laboratory Equipment for the Contemporary Communication

Department. Western Speech Communication Association, San Diego.

62. 1988 Motley, M.T. Verbal Slips and Double Entendres: Clues to the Efficiency of

Natural Language Production. San Diego State University, Distinguished Lecturer

Series, San Diego. (invited)

63. 1988 Motley, M.T. The Reduction of Public-Speaking Anxiety. San Diego State

University, Distinguished Lecturer Series, San Diego. (invited)

64. 1988 Motley, M.T. Speech Anxiety. University of California at San Francisco, Public

Health Lecture Series, San Francisco. (invited)

65. 1988 Motley, M.T. Conceptual Frontiers in Language Behavior. Conference on

Conceptual Frontiers in Communication, University of Southern Mississippi.

(invited)

66. 1988 Motley, M.T. Stimulus Preparation in Cognitive Communication Experiments.

Speech Communication Association, New Orleans. (invited)

67. 1988 Motley, M.T. Linguistic Antecedents to Natural Speech Errors. Calif. State Univ. at San Jose Visiting Scholar Series. (invited)

68. 1989 Motley, M.T. Combining Freudian and Cognitive Accounts of Slips of the Tongue and Double Entendres. Davis Group for Applied Psychoanalysis, Davis, CA.

(invited)

69. 1990 Motley, M.T. Verbal Slips and Double Entendres as Conversational Poetics.

Speech Communication Association. Chicago.

70. 1990 Motley, M.T. Ethical Issues in Interpersonal Communication Research. Speech

Communication Association. Chicago.

Papers Presented continued: Michael T. Motley

71. 1991 Motley, M.T. An Introduction to MBTI Theory and its Potential Application to

Communication Issues. Western Speech Communication Association. Phoenix.

72. 1991 Motley, M.T. When the Predominant Meaning inInterpersonal Communication is

Not Nonverbal: Facial Expression of Emotion as Ambiguous Interjections.

Speech Communication Assn. Atlanta.

73. 1992 Motley, M.T. Issues Beyond Equivocal Communication. Western States

Communication Assn. Boise. (invited)

74. 1992 Motley, M.T. Facial Expression in Conversation asNonverbal Interjection, UCD

Psychology Dept. Colloquium. (invited)

75. 1992 Motley, M.T. Contemporary Issues in Language Behavior. Western States

Communication Assn. Boise. (invited)

76. 1992 Motley, M.T. Whither Communication Theory: Ideologies that Delimit What we

Know. Speech Communication Assn. Chicago. (invited)

77. 1992 Motley, M. T. A Reply to Stewart (WJSC, 1991). Speech Communication Assn.

Chicago. (invited)

78. 1993 Motley, M.T. & Molloy, J. An Efficacy Test of a New Therapy for Public

Speaking Anxiety.Western States Communication Assn. Albuquerque.

79. 1993 Motley, M.T. A Critique of Communication Research: The Social Relevance

Criterion. Western States Communication Assn. Albuquerque. (invited)

80. 1993 Motley, M.T. Making Communication Issues Socially Relevant. Western Illinois

University, W.N. Thompson Memorial Lecture. Macomb. (invited)

81. 1993 Motley, M.T. The Legacy of Theodore Clevenger, Jr. Speech Communication

Assn. Miami. (invited)

82. 1993 Motley, M.T. Coordinating the Needs of Researchers, Instructors, and Students of

Communication. Speech Communication Assn. Miami.

83. 1993 Motley, M.T. The Social-Relevance Challenge to Interpersonal-Communication

Research. Western States Communication Assn. San Jose.

84. 1994 Motley, M.T., and Reeder, H.M. Comparing Male and Female Perceptions of

Relational Consequences of Direct and Indirect Sexual Resistance Messages.

Western States Communication Assn. Portland.

Papers Presented continued: Michael T. Motley

85. 1994 Motley, M.T., and Reeder, H.M. Messages Used by Women to Thwart Male

Escalation of Sexual Intimacy: One More Instance of Male/Female

Misunderstanding. Speech Communication Assn. New Orleans.

86. 1995 Motley, M.T. Understanding and Applying COM Therapy. Speech

Communication Assn. San Antonio.

87. 1995 Motley, M.T. Addressing the Problems of Everyday Communicators via

Communication Research. Speech Communication Assn. San Antonio.

88. 1996 Motley, M.T. Deescalating Sexual Intimacy: When She Says ‘No,’ Does He

Understand? Summer Faculty Speaker Series, UCD.

89. 1996 Motley, M.T., Reeder, H.M., and Faulkner, L. Influences upon the Fate of

Friendships after Unrequited Romantic Disclosures. Western States

Communication Assn. Pasadena.

90. 1996 Motley, M.T. COM Therapy: Supporting Theory via Efficacy Data. Speech

Communication Assn., San Diego.

91. 1997 Motley, M.T. Unrequited Love vs. Friendship. 23rd Conference in

Communication, Fresno State University. (invited)

92. 1997 Motley, M.T. Keynote Address: Interpersonal Communication and Social

Relevance, 23rd Conference in Communication, Fresno State University. (invited)

93. 1997 Motley, M.T. Maintaining Friendships After Unrequited Disclosure of Romantic

Inclinations, Summer Faculty Speaker Series, UCD.

94. 1998 Motley, M.T. Does the Communication Discipline Unwittingly Inhibit Applied

Communication Research? National Communication Assn., New York.

95. 1999 Motley, M.T. Ethical and Other Human-Subjects Concerns in Medical Research.

UCD Medical School, Davis, CA. (invited)

96. 1999 Motley, M.T. Communication Behaviors that Determine the Fate of Male/Female

Friendships After Unrequited Romantic Attraction. National Communication

Assn., Chicago.

97. .2000 Motley, M.T. Radicalizing the Teaching of Public Speaking: The

“Communication Perspective.” National Communication Assn. Seattle.

Papers Presented continued: Michael T. Motley

98. 2001 Motley, M.T. Dynamics of Verbal Coercion to Unwanted Sexual Intimacy.

Western States Communication Assn. Coeur d’Alene, ID.

99. 2002 Motley, M.T. Using “The Workout Round” to Teach Directness. Western States

Communication Assn. Long Beach.

100. 2002 Motley, M.T. Taking Action in the Classroom: Proactive Reduction of Public

Speaking Anxiety via the Communication Perspective. New Orleans.

101. 2006 Motley, M.T. Oralism and public-speaking anxiety. Western States

Communication Assn., Palm Springs.

102. 2006 Motley, M.T. The state of contemporary research in language and communication.

National Communication Assn., San Antonio. (invited)

103. 2007 Motley, M.T. Using the “Work Out Round” to teach conversational style,

National Communication Assn, Chicago.

104. 2009 Motley, M.T. Forensic Communication: Questions of message interpretation in court cases. National Communication Assn, Chicago.

105. 2010 Motley, M.T. Comparing therapies for public-speaking anxiety. National

Communication Assn, San Francisco

.

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