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Kinesic Cues: Body and Eye Movements

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Structural Approach to Kinesics. Made famous by Ray Birdwhistle ... Translating that to kinesics: Kines: smallest identifiable body movement ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Kinesic Cues: Body and Eye Movements


1
Kinesic Cues Body and Eye Movements
2
Definition of Kinesic Cues
  • Refers to all forms of body movements excluding
    physical contact w/ others.
  • Often referred to body language

3
Approaches to Studying Kinesics
  • Three broad approaches
  • Structural approach
  • Functional approach
  • Study of eye behaviors specifically

4
Structural Approach to Kinesics
  • Made famous by Ray Birdwhistle
  • Identify discrete, universal body movements that
    combine to form NV meaning.
  • Referred to it as a linguistic-kinesic analogy
  • Classify kinesic cues using a linguistic system

5
Structural Approach to Kinesics
  • In the study of language, there are
  • Phonemes units of sound
  • Morphemes combination of phonemes to form words
    and sentences
  • Translating that to kinesics
  • Kines smallest identifiable body movement
  • Allokines variation in intensity duration of
    kines
  • Kinemes smallest meaningful combinations of the
    other two (similar to words)

6
Functional Approach to Kinesics
  • Alternative suggested by Ekman and Friesen
  • Considers what kinesic cues actually do
  • Using this system, 5 categories of kinesic cues
    were developed
  • Each designed to serve specific functions

7
Emblems
  • Kinesic cues w/ direct verbal translation.
  • Frequently used to substitute verbal messages.
  • Generally have a precise meaning among members of
    a social group.
  • Often intentionally sent and perceived.
  • Not contextually-bounded.

8
Illustrators
  • Kinesic cues accompanying speech that serves
    multiple purposes.
  • Usually not stand alone gestures
  • May accent, complement, repeat, or contradict
    verbal messages.
  • Eight types of illustrators have been identified.

9
Some Common Illustrators
  • Batons
  • Ideographs
  • Kinetographs
  • Pictographs
  • Spatials
  • Pointers
  • Rhythmic movements
  • Emblematic movements

10
Regulators
  • Kinesic cues designed to maintain or regulate
    verbal conversations.
  • Primarily helps to control the flow of the verbal
    messages.
  • Serves the function of a traffic cop for verbal
    communication

11
Affect Displays
  • Kinesic cues that reveal a persons emotions.
  • Primarily displayed via the face, but may also
    use the body.
  • Emotional expressions may or may not be
    intentionally sent.

12
Adaptors
  • Kinesic cues that help a person cope w/ an
    uncomfortable environment
  • Comes in three forms
  • Self
  • Alter-directed
  • Object-directed

13
Eye Behaviors (as a Kinesic Cue)
  • Neglected by Birdwhistle and Ekman and Friesen.
  • Similar approaches used to classify eye
    behaviors.
  • Structural
  • Functional

14
Structural Approach to Eye Behaviors
  • Proposed by Cranach and Ellgring
  • Differentiated between one-sided vs. mutual look
  • One-sided look non-reciprocated
  • Mutual look reciprocated
  • Gaze avoidance and gaze omission
  • Gaze avoidance intentional
  • Gaze omission - unintentional

15
Functional Approach to Eye Behaviors
  • Proposed by Rutter
  • Distinguished between eye contact and looking
    behavior
  • Looking serves a surveillance or feedback
    function
  • Eye contact used to convey emotions and liking
    for others

16
Kinesic Norms
  • Highly variable at the individual level but are
    highly normative at the cultural level.
  • Norms for emblems
  • Serves similar function in all cultures
  • Unfortunately, meanings are culturally-bound

17
Kinesic Norms
  • Norms for illustrators
  • Some cultures are more illustrative than others
  • Illustrators more normative for use among
    same-sex friends
  • Norms for regulators
  • Most rule governed kinesic behavior
  • Especially the case w/ eye contact

18
Kinesic Norms
  • Norms for affect displays
  • Cultural differences in experience and expression
    of various emotions.
  • Five common display rules operate
  • Simulation
  • Intensification
  • Neutralization
  • De-intensification
  • Masking

19
Kinesic Norms
  • Norms for adaptors
  • Primary norm is to avoid using them in public
  • Especially the case for self-adaptors
  • Less severe for alter-directed or object-directed
    adaptors

20
Kinesic Norms
  • Norms for eye behaviors
  • Excessive staring or eye avoidance is
    non-normative.
  • Pupil dilation generally indicates arousal,
    positive affect, or attraction.
  • Eye movements said to correspond to activated
    brain hemisphere.
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