Nonverbal Communication Chapter 6
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Transcript Nonverbal Communication Chapter 6
Nonverbal Communication
Chapter 6
Nonverbal Communication
Nonverbal Communication: those
behaviors and characteristics that convey
meaning without the use of words
Nonverbal Communication
Often accompanies verbal comm.
Can clarify or reinforce verbal
However, nonverbal can convey meanings on
its own
Characteristics of Nonverbal
Communication
Present in interpersonal
conversations
-Use emoticons if necessary
Often conveys more
information than verbal
65-70% of meaning from NV
(Burgoon)
Uses multiple channels
Usually believed over verbal
If messages conflict, we believe NV
Hillary Clinton clip
https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=r6KBh5FzQdk
Characteristics of NV Comm.
Primary means of communicating emotion
Esp. vocalics and facial expressions
Ekman: happiness, fear, disgust, anger, sadness,
surprise
Meta-communicative
NV used to communicate about our communication
Used to indicate how someone should interpret our
message
Smile and wink to indicate sarcasm
Raise eyebrows or furrow brow to indicate
seriousness
Functions of Nonverbal
Communication
Managing Conversations
Regulates verbal communication
Inviting conversations
Managing conversations
Turn-taking behavior
Ending conversations
Break eye contact
Left-positioning—move body in direction we want
to go
Functions of Nonverbal
Expressing Emotions
Facial expressions
“Ready revealers” wear emotions on face
Vocal expressions
Maintaining Relationships
Attraction and Affiliation
Immediacy behaviors—NV behaviors that send
messages of attraction or affiliation (flirting)
Established relationships—hug, kiss, change in
vocalics, etc.
Functions of NV Comm.
Maintaining Relationships
Power and Dominance
Power—potential to affect another person’s
behavior
Dominance—actual exercise of that potential
Artifacts—used as status symbols
“The look”
Functions of NV Comm.
Arousal and Relaxation
Arousal—increase in energy
Could be anxiety (negative) or excitement (positive)
Relaxation—situation of decreased energy
Could be contentment (positive) or depression
(negative)
Functions of NV Comm.
Forming impressions
“People watching”
Demographic impression
Age, ethnicity, sex, voice
Sociocultural impressions
Socio-economic status, cultural, and co-cultural
groups
Personal appearance
Functions of NV Comm.
Influencing others
Creating credibility
Project a credible image through dress, vocalics, etc.
Promoting affiliation
More persuaded by people we like
Touch is very powerful
Interactional synchrony—convergence of two
people’s behaviors—”mirroring”
Concealing information
Deception
Facial expressions, mouth, eye contact, vocalics
Channels of Nonverbal
Communication
We experience nonverbal
communication in many
different forms—known
as channels
FACIAL DISPLAYS
Also known as facial expressions
Principle of Facial Primacy—face communicates
more information than any other channel of NV
Identity—how we know who someone is
Facial Displays
Attractiveness
Consistency in what people find attractive across
cultures
Symmetry—between left and right sides of face
Proportionality—relative size of one’s facial
features
Emotion
Facial expression is main channel of NV behavior
Women tend to decode/read facial cues better
Nonmanual signals—facial expressions in sign
language
Eye Contact
Oculesics—study of eye behavior
Signals attraction, credibility, intimidation
Pupil size—can change based on arousal
levels, not just light levels
Movement and Gestures
Kinesics—movement
Gesticulation—arm and hand movements
Emblems—direct translation
Hello, good-bye
Illustrators—complement verbal
“this big,” “about this tall”
Movement and Gestures
Affect displays—communicate emotion
Cover mouth when surprised, coincide with
emotion
Regulators—control flow of comm.
Raise hand in class, reduce eye contact
Adaptors—satisfy a personal need
Self-adaptors—scratch, fidget
Other-adaptors—touch another
Touch
Haptics
Affectionate
Caregiving touch
Power and Control
Aggressive Touh
Ritualistic Touch
Greetings
Athletic Events
Vocalics
Vocalics—characteristics of your voice
Paralanguage—”beside language”—goes
along with words we speak
Pitch, inflection, volume, rate, fillers,
pronunciation, articulation, accent, silence
Olfactics
Sense of smell
Considered the sense that is most
likely to trigger memory
Olfactic association
Memories we connect with specific smells
Sexual attraction
Plays a major role in whom we feel attracted
to
Find people more sexually attractive if their
scent is dissimilar to ours—healthier babies
Proxemics
Study of personal space
Edward T. Hall, Anthropologist
Focuses on Western culture
Intimate Distance”-18”
Personal Distance 18”-4’
Social Distance 4’-12’
Public Distance 12’-25’ or greater
Exception—people with disabilities
Physical Appearance
Halo effect
Attribute positive qualities to physically attractive
people
What are the costs of a culture that puts so
much emphasis on physical attractiveness?
Time
Chronemics—the way people use time
Sends messages about power
Very culturally bound
Not in book but of interest—Edward Hall
Molychronic Time (M-Time)
Time is seen as being a limited resource which is constantly
being used up. This perspective is oriented to the future.
Polychronic Time (P-Time)
Views time in a more "circular" fashion, as the turning of the
seasons, and time is seen as renewing itself each year.
Promptness is not considered important. This perspective is
oriented to the past and/or present.
Artifacts
Physical environment we inhabit
Objects and visual features within an
environment that reflect who we are and
what we like
How we adorn ourselves can also be
considered part of artifacts (hair, piercing,
tattoos, dress style, etc.)
CULTURE INFLUENCES NONVERBAL
COMMUNICATION
Emblems
Affect displays
Greeting behavior
Time orientations
Personal distance
Eye contact
Facial displays of
emotion
Touch
Vocalics
SEX INFLUENCES NONVERBAL
COMMUNICATION
Emotional expressiveness
Women more expressive: joy, affection, sadness, depression
Men more expressive: anger (some studies disagree)
Eye contact
Women have increased eye contact in US and Japan
Female pairs use more gaze when speaking, listening, and silence
Male-female pairs similar to female-female findings
Personal space
Women approached more closely, allow more space violations,
stand/sit closer to others
Men more likely to violate women’s space than women are to violate
men’s space
Sex Influences on NV
Vocalics
Men use more fillers and pauses than women
Touch
Men more likely to touch women than women
touching men (unless it’s a greeting)
Same-sex pairs, women touch more than men (but
difference is reduced in close friendships)
Appearance
Women and men adorn differently
Western culture—women use make-up more than
men
Hair and clothing styles generally different
Improving your Nonverbal Skills
Learn to adapt to others’ styles
Interpreting skills
Be sensitive to nonverbals
Decipher the meaning of nonverbals
Expressing skills
Learn from others
Practice being expressive