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The World Beyond Words

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Comparing Verbal and Nonverbal Communication Nonverbal Behavior Nonverbal Communication Kinesics (body ... Kinesics Body positions and movement including ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The World Beyond Words


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Comparing Verbal and Nonverbal Communication
Similarities
Differences
Both are symbolic. Both are rule guided. Both can
be intentional or unintentional. Both are
culture-bound.
Nonverbal communication is usually perceived as
more believable. Nonverbal can be
multichanneled. Nonverbal is continuous.
3
Nonverbal Behavior
Accounts for 65 - 93 of the total meaning of
communication
4
Nonverbal Communication
  • Kinesics (body motion)
  • Haptics (touch)
  • Physical appearance
  • Artifacts
  • Paralanguage
  • Silence
  • Environmental factors
  • Proxemics and personal space
  • Chronemics (time)

Everything except the words!
5
  • When nonverbal and verbal messages are
    inconsistent, we tend to believe the nonverbal.

6
Principles of Nonverbal Communication
  • May supplement or replace verbal communication
  • May regulate interaction
  • Often establishes relationship-level meanings
  • Responsiveness
  • Liking
  • Power
  • Reflects and expresses cultural values

7
  • Content level of meaning
  • The literal, or denotative, information in a
    message
  • Relationship level of meaning
  • Meaning that expresses the relationship between
    communicators

8
KinesicsBody positions and movement including
those of the face
  • Posture can signal self-assurance.
  • Posture can tell others if we are open to
    interaction.
  • The face is capable of over one thousand
    different expressions.
  • Nonverbal behaviors such as positioning, smiling,
    close seating and gazes signal how we feel about
    others.

9
Eyes The mirrors of the soul
  • We tend to look at eyes to judge
  • Emotions
  • Honesty
  • Interest
  • Self-confidence

Microsoft Photo
10
Haptics (touch)
  • Touching and being touched are essential to a
    healthy life.
  • Touch can communicate power and status.
  • Women tend to touch to show liking, while men
    often use touch to exert power.

Microsoft Photo
11
Who Touches the Most?
  • Teacher or student?
  • Doctor or patient?
  • Manager or worker?
  • Minister or parishioner?
  • Police officer or accused?
  • Business executive or secretary?

12
The higher status person is usually permitted to
touch the lower-status person.
What implications does this behavior have?
13
Sexual Harassment
  • Creation of a hostile or uncomfortable
    environment
  • Unwelcome gestures
  • Body language
  • Conversation
  • Sexually oriented printed material

14
Physical Appearance
  • What message do you wish to send with your choice
    of clothing and personal grooming?

Microsoft Photo
15
Artifacts
Personal objects we use to announce our
identities and heritage and to personalize our
environments
Microsoft Photos
16
Environmental Factors
  • Elements of settings that affect how we feel and
    act
  • Architecture
  • Colors
  • Temperature
  • Sounds
  • Smells
  • Lighting

17
Proxemics and Personal Space
  • Every culture has norms for using space.
  • In the U.S. we interact with acquaintances from
    4 to 12 and within 18 or less for close
    friends or intimates.
  • In China families often share bathrooms and
    kitchens with other families.
  • People who want to even out power seek out
    neutral territory.
  • Greater space may be assumed by those with higher
    status.
  • Those with greater power often invade others
    territory.

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Proxemics and Personal Space
  • How people arrange space reflects how close they
    are and whether they want interaction.
  • Home furniture arranged comfortably and close
    invites conversation.
  • Offices with seating open rather than a desk
    separating people invites interaction.
  • Restaurants can arrange seating to encourage
    people to spend time or to eat quickly and leave.

19
Chronemics (time)
  • How do we manage and react to others management
    of time
  • Duration
  • Activity
  • Punctuality

Microsoft Photo
20
Paralanguage
Communication that is vocal but that does not use
words themselves
  • Sounds (gasps and murmurs)
  • Vocal qualities
  • Volume
  • Rhythm
  • Pitch
  • Inflection
  • How we pronounce words
  • The accents we use
  • Complexity of our sentences

21
Silence
  • Silence can be a disconfirming symbol.
  • When you talk to someone and they do not reply
  • When children are disciplined by being ignored
  • Silence can be comforting.
  • When intimates are so close they do not need to
    talk
  • When there is an absence of disturbing noise

22
Interpretation of others Nonverbal Cues
  • Research has shown that the lower status person
    has more skills at interpreting the nonverbal
    cues of people with higher status.
  • Women were once thought to have intuition now we
    may think it is only because they had lower
    status.
  • Who would be the least skilled at interpreting
    others nonverbal cues?

23
Experiencing Communication in our Lives . . .
  • View the following video clip and then answer
    the questions that follow based on material
    presented in this chapter. A script of the
    scenario can be found at the end of Chapter 6.

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Wadsworth Thomson Wood Scenarios
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  • Identify nonverbal behaviors that regulate
    turn-taking within the team.
  • Identify nonverbal behaviors that express the
    relational level of meanings. What aspects of
    team members nonverbal communication express
    liking or disliking, responsiveness or lack of
    responsiveness, and power?
  • How do artifacts affect interaction among members
    of the team?
  • If you were the fifth member of this team, what
    kinds of communication might you enact to help
    relieve tension in the group?
  • You may go to your student CD that accompanies
    the text to compare your answers to Julia Woods.

26
To improve our communication . . .
  • We need to monitor our own nonverbal
    communication and exercise care in interpreting
    that of others.

27
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