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Chp 6: Nonverbal Communication

Chp 6: Nonverbal Communication

BOOK: pgs. 83-96

PDF: pgs. 93-106

What you need to know

  • Define nonverbal comm.

  • What are the functions of nonverbal comm.? (repeating; accenting, substituting with emblems; complementing with illustrators; regulating; contradicting/conflicting)

  • What are emoticons and emojis?

  • Types of Nonverbal Comm.

    • Body movement and the study of kinesics;

    • Vocalics and paralanguage, pitch, volume and rate, disfluencies;

    • Appearance and artifacts;

    • Touch and the study of haptics;

    • Oculesics - the study of eye movement;

    • Space and the study of proxemics;

    • Environment; and time and the study of chronemics,

    • Olfactics communication related to smell;

  • Nonverbal communication competence (pay attention to reliable nonverbal cues; perception checking; self-monitoring)

  • Practice quiz: http://fountainheadpress.com/commpath/quizzes/commpath_ch06/

Nonverbal Communication

  • Nonverbal communication - the process of intentionally or unintentionally signaling meaning through behavior other than words.

  • Kinds of human messages and response not expressed in words

  • Elements of communication other than the words spoken themselves

  • But they transmit meaning, and can display more emotional meaning (except for a poker face)

  • People extract meaning more from nonverbal than verbal, typically

  • Often spontaneous and, unintentional

  • More believable than verbal communication (channel discrepancy)

Nonverbal Communication Principles

  • They convey emotional and relationship information

  • They maintain a relationship with verbal messages

  • They rely on context for meaning

  • But are we having communication discrepancies wearing a mask?

Nonverbal Functions

  • Repeating: the physical actions that follow (are after) the verbal message reinforce what’s being said - saying hi and then waving. Illustrators

  • Accenting - behavior that makes something greater (augment) such as pounding fists - increasing the intensity of a message

  • Complementing - nonverbal behavior more subdued, that occurs at the same time as the verbal message. Similar to accenting, but no such amplifying of a message. Illustrators

  • Substituting - nonverbal replaces the verbal message. Emblems are gestures with a specific meaning

  • Regulating - actions that govern the course of an interaction with another in conversation - help regulate/manage our interactions

  • Conflicting - when a verbal message says one thing, but the nonverbal indicates another

Types of Nonverbals

  • Kinesics - gestures and body movements

    • Nonverbal behaviors that relate to the movement of the body

    • Open and closed body posture

    • Mirror

    • Affect displays, nonverbals that convey emotion, feelings, and reactions

    • Adaptors, satisfy bodily needs

  • Oculesics - the study of eye movement

    • Use eye contact to convey feelings, attitudes, and thoughts

    • Maintaining it in the US is perceived as respectful

    • It shows attention to the speaker, too

    • Other cultures it is viewed negatively

  • Proxemics - the study of how we use of and communicate with space

  • Edward T. Hall identified 4 distanced zones in Western culture

    • Intimate distance - a foot and a half apart; their own space

    • Personal distance - from a foot and a half to about four feet apart; friendships or collegiality

    • Social distance - four feet to twelve feet apart; people with little to no connection

    • Public distance - from twelve feet on; conveys a formal situation

    • Be familiar with the measurements: T/F question on the exam

  • Haptics - touch

  • Use touch in a variety of ways to send messages

    • Functional/professional - the least intimate type of touch used by certain workers such as dentists, hairstylists, and hospice workers, as part of their livelihood

    • Control/power - touch used to exert power over a person

    • Love/intimate - touch most often used with one’s romantic partners and family

    • Excitement - most intimate level of personal contact with one another

    • Anger - touch used for physical harm

  • Chronemics - the study of how people perceive the use of and meaning in time

    • How people treat, value, react to, and construct time

  • How someone uses time conveys

    • Emotions - who you choose to spend time with shows how you feel about them and how you prioritize them in your life

    • Personal values - respecting another person’s desire to respond and not “hogging the air” illustrates an understanding of time in a conversation and the right all people have to a share of that time

  • Differs across groups and cultures

    • Monochronic people (doing things one at a time). Like to be on time like the Germans.

    • Vs.

    • Polychronic people (doing several tasks at once - more fluid with time) not as concerned whether someone is on time or not. More fluid approach to time (like the Spanish)

  • Olfactics - meaning of smells

  • Meaning to different smells differs by culture

  • Smell triggers memories, too, thus meaning

  • Vocalics - meaning of voice. The goal is to have good vocal variety, inflection,

  • Paralanguage - vocalized sounds that accompany words:

    • Pitch - how high or low your voice sounds when you speak

    • Volume - how loud or soft a person’s voice is

    • Tone (warmth) - the emphasis placed on syllables, sounds, words, and phrases

    • Rate - how fast you deliver a message

    • Pauses, silent and vocalized

      • Silent pauses - occur when there’s a momentary cessation of any sound

      • Vocalized pauses - occur when people use sounds and words like “uh,” “um,” and “y’know” to fill the void (filler words)

    • Gasps and sighs - the use of breath to convey a message

      • Gasps - surprise or fear

      • Sighs - frustration, tiredness, or uncomfortableness

    • How to sound smart in your Ted Talk

Type of Nonverbals Artifacts

  • Objects or accessories used to communicate information about yourself to others (Attitudes, Feelings, Moods, Beliefs, Interests, Hobbies, Ideologies)

  • What about tattoos today?

Technology Influences Nonverbal Communication

  • Using technology sometimes results in the loss of paralinguistic cues (your characteristic style or manner of expressing yourself orally, “His manner of speaking was quite abrupt”; “Her speech was barren of southernisms”; “He spoke quickly”)

  • Emoticons :) using keyboard keys

  • About Emojis “pictographs”):

Guidelines for Dialogic NV Communication

Key Terms

  1. Nonverbal communication - the elements of communication that do not involve words but nevertheless transmit messages

  2. Repeating - the function of nonverbal communication whereby physical actions that follow verbal messages reinforce what is said

  3. Accenting - the function of nonverbal communication whereby nonverbal behaviors augment a message while it is delivered

  4. Complementing - the function of nonverbal communication whereby nonverbal behavior occurring at the same time as the message displays the same content

  5. Substituting - the function of nonverbal communication whereby physical actions take the place of verbal messages

  6. Regulating - the actions that govern the course of an interaction with another person

  7. Conflicting - when a verbal message says one thing while corresponding nonverbal communication indicates something different

  8. Kinesics - nonverbal behaviors related to the movement of the body

  9. Open posture - the posture achieved when the majority of one’s body faces the audience or other person

  10. Closed posture - the posture achieved when one shields his or her body from the other person

  11. Mirror - the practice of replicating the posture of the other person to indicate mutual interest

  12. Oculesics - the use of eye contact to send messages

  13. Proxemics - how we use space to convey information

  14. Haptics - the study of how touch expresses meaning

  15. Chronemics - the branch of nonverbal communication that involves how people, treat, value, react to, and structure time

  16. Monochronic - the category of chronemics marked by liking to do things one at a time, breaking time up into small, manageable units

  17. Polychronic - the category of chronemics marked by trying to do several tasks at the same time and having a more fluid approach to scheduling time

  18. Olfactics - the dimension of nonverbal communication related to smell

  19. Vocalics - those things that contribute to the maintenance or creation of sound in your voice that help convey meaning

  20. Artifacts - objects used to communicate information about yourself to those around you

KP

Chp 6: Nonverbal Communication

Chp 6: Nonverbal Communication

BOOK: pgs. 83-96

PDF: pgs. 93-106

What you need to know

  • Define nonverbal comm.

  • What are the functions of nonverbal comm.? (repeating; accenting, substituting with emblems; complementing with illustrators; regulating; contradicting/conflicting)

  • What are emoticons and emojis?

  • Types of Nonverbal Comm.

    • Body movement and the study of kinesics;

    • Vocalics and paralanguage, pitch, volume and rate, disfluencies;

    • Appearance and artifacts;

    • Touch and the study of haptics;

    • Oculesics - the study of eye movement;

    • Space and the study of proxemics;

    • Environment; and time and the study of chronemics,

    • Olfactics communication related to smell;

  • Nonverbal communication competence (pay attention to reliable nonverbal cues; perception checking; self-monitoring)

  • Practice quiz: http://fountainheadpress.com/commpath/quizzes/commpath_ch06/

Nonverbal Communication

  • Nonverbal communication - the process of intentionally or unintentionally signaling meaning through behavior other than words.

  • Kinds of human messages and response not expressed in words

  • Elements of communication other than the words spoken themselves

  • But they transmit meaning, and can display more emotional meaning (except for a poker face)

  • People extract meaning more from nonverbal than verbal, typically

  • Often spontaneous and, unintentional

  • More believable than verbal communication (channel discrepancy)

Nonverbal Communication Principles

  • They convey emotional and relationship information

  • They maintain a relationship with verbal messages

  • They rely on context for meaning

  • But are we having communication discrepancies wearing a mask?

Nonverbal Functions

  • Repeating: the physical actions that follow (are after) the verbal message reinforce what’s being said - saying hi and then waving. Illustrators

  • Accenting - behavior that makes something greater (augment) such as pounding fists - increasing the intensity of a message

  • Complementing - nonverbal behavior more subdued, that occurs at the same time as the verbal message. Similar to accenting, but no such amplifying of a message. Illustrators

  • Substituting - nonverbal replaces the verbal message. Emblems are gestures with a specific meaning

  • Regulating - actions that govern the course of an interaction with another in conversation - help regulate/manage our interactions

  • Conflicting - when a verbal message says one thing, but the nonverbal indicates another

Types of Nonverbals

  • Kinesics - gestures and body movements

    • Nonverbal behaviors that relate to the movement of the body

    • Open and closed body posture

    • Mirror

    • Affect displays, nonverbals that convey emotion, feelings, and reactions

    • Adaptors, satisfy bodily needs

  • Oculesics - the study of eye movement

    • Use eye contact to convey feelings, attitudes, and thoughts

    • Maintaining it in the US is perceived as respectful

    • It shows attention to the speaker, too

    • Other cultures it is viewed negatively

  • Proxemics - the study of how we use of and communicate with space

  • Edward T. Hall identified 4 distanced zones in Western culture

    • Intimate distance - a foot and a half apart; their own space

    • Personal distance - from a foot and a half to about four feet apart; friendships or collegiality

    • Social distance - four feet to twelve feet apart; people with little to no connection

    • Public distance - from twelve feet on; conveys a formal situation

    • Be familiar with the measurements: T/F question on the exam

  • Haptics - touch

  • Use touch in a variety of ways to send messages

    • Functional/professional - the least intimate type of touch used by certain workers such as dentists, hairstylists, and hospice workers, as part of their livelihood

    • Control/power - touch used to exert power over a person

    • Love/intimate - touch most often used with one’s romantic partners and family

    • Excitement - most intimate level of personal contact with one another

    • Anger - touch used for physical harm

  • Chronemics - the study of how people perceive the use of and meaning in time

    • How people treat, value, react to, and construct time

  • How someone uses time conveys

    • Emotions - who you choose to spend time with shows how you feel about them and how you prioritize them in your life

    • Personal values - respecting another person’s desire to respond and not “hogging the air” illustrates an understanding of time in a conversation and the right all people have to a share of that time

  • Differs across groups and cultures

    • Monochronic people (doing things one at a time). Like to be on time like the Germans.

    • Vs.

    • Polychronic people (doing several tasks at once - more fluid with time) not as concerned whether someone is on time or not. More fluid approach to time (like the Spanish)

  • Olfactics - meaning of smells

  • Meaning to different smells differs by culture

  • Smell triggers memories, too, thus meaning

  • Vocalics - meaning of voice. The goal is to have good vocal variety, inflection,

  • Paralanguage - vocalized sounds that accompany words:

    • Pitch - how high or low your voice sounds when you speak

    • Volume - how loud or soft a person’s voice is

    • Tone (warmth) - the emphasis placed on syllables, sounds, words, and phrases

    • Rate - how fast you deliver a message

    • Pauses, silent and vocalized

      • Silent pauses - occur when there’s a momentary cessation of any sound

      • Vocalized pauses - occur when people use sounds and words like “uh,” “um,” and “y’know” to fill the void (filler words)

    • Gasps and sighs - the use of breath to convey a message

      • Gasps - surprise or fear

      • Sighs - frustration, tiredness, or uncomfortableness

    • How to sound smart in your Ted Talk

Type of Nonverbals Artifacts

  • Objects or accessories used to communicate information about yourself to others (Attitudes, Feelings, Moods, Beliefs, Interests, Hobbies, Ideologies)

  • What about tattoos today?

Technology Influences Nonverbal Communication

  • Using technology sometimes results in the loss of paralinguistic cues (your characteristic style or manner of expressing yourself orally, “His manner of speaking was quite abrupt”; “Her speech was barren of southernisms”; “He spoke quickly”)

  • Emoticons :) using keyboard keys

  • About Emojis “pictographs”):

Guidelines for Dialogic NV Communication

Key Terms

  1. Nonverbal communication - the elements of communication that do not involve words but nevertheless transmit messages

  2. Repeating - the function of nonverbal communication whereby physical actions that follow verbal messages reinforce what is said

  3. Accenting - the function of nonverbal communication whereby nonverbal behaviors augment a message while it is delivered

  4. Complementing - the function of nonverbal communication whereby nonverbal behavior occurring at the same time as the message displays the same content

  5. Substituting - the function of nonverbal communication whereby physical actions take the place of verbal messages

  6. Regulating - the actions that govern the course of an interaction with another person

  7. Conflicting - when a verbal message says one thing while corresponding nonverbal communication indicates something different

  8. Kinesics - nonverbal behaviors related to the movement of the body

  9. Open posture - the posture achieved when the majority of one’s body faces the audience or other person

  10. Closed posture - the posture achieved when one shields his or her body from the other person

  11. Mirror - the practice of replicating the posture of the other person to indicate mutual interest

  12. Oculesics - the use of eye contact to send messages

  13. Proxemics - how we use space to convey information

  14. Haptics - the study of how touch expresses meaning

  15. Chronemics - the branch of nonverbal communication that involves how people, treat, value, react to, and structure time

  16. Monochronic - the category of chronemics marked by liking to do things one at a time, breaking time up into small, manageable units

  17. Polychronic - the category of chronemics marked by trying to do several tasks at the same time and having a more fluid approach to scheduling time

  18. Olfactics - the dimension of nonverbal communication related to smell

  19. Vocalics - those things that contribute to the maintenance or creation of sound in your voice that help convey meaning

  20. Artifacts - objects used to communicate information about yourself to those around you