Nonverbal Communication: Readings with CommentaryShirley Weitz |
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Page 232
... factors which may have had an influence on it . At this point a problem arises : what kinds of factors must be neutralized , rendered constant , in order to isolate proxemic behavior from their differen- tial influence ? A model that I ...
... factors which may have had an influence on it . At this point a problem arises : what kinds of factors must be neutralized , rendered constant , in order to isolate proxemic behavior from their differen- tial influence ? A model that I ...
Page 233
... factors on which interactants base their defini- tions of the situation are reducible to two categories ... factors ( height , weight , disfigurement , etc. ) , physiological factors ( states of fatigue , anger , excitement , etc ...
... factors on which interactants base their defini- tions of the situation are reducible to two categories ... factors ( height , weight , disfigurement , etc. ) , physiological factors ( states of fatigue , anger , excitement , etc ...
Page 315
... factors were ( 1 ) the degree of positive evaluation and ( 2 ) the degree of negative evaluation re- ceived from the ... factor in this experiment because it re- lated most directly to the model for af- filiative behavior ...
... factors were ( 1 ) the degree of positive evaluation and ( 2 ) the degree of negative evaluation re- ceived from the ... factor in this experiment because it re- lated most directly to the model for af- filiative behavior ...
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 3 |
FACIAL EXPRESSION AND VISUAL INTERACTION | 11 |
Similarities and Differences Between Cultures in Expressive Movements | 20 |
Copyright | |
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affiliative American American Psychological Association analysis anger attitude Birdwhistell body movement chair cial communica components confederate context correlation courtship cues culture deception clues display distance Dittmann dyad effect Eibl-Eibesfeldt Ekman emic emotion example Exline experiment experimental eye contact face facial area facial expressions factors FAST feedback feelings female film Friesen function havior head human individual inter interac interaction interpersonal interview judges Kaswan kinesic language leakage listener look male markers means Mehrabian ment messages munication negative non-fluency nonverbal behavior nonverbal communication occur pairs paralanguage paralinguistic participants patterns Paul Ekman phonemic clause position posture present Press proxemic behavior psychotherapy quasi-courting r₁ ratings relationship response scored semiosis sender subject signal sion situation skin conductance Social Psychology space spatial spatial behavior speaker specific speech speech encoding stimulus Table tion tive tural ture turn-taking variables verbal vocal voice York