Non-verbal CommunicationR.A. Hinde (ed) Cambridge University Press, 1972 - 443 Seiten The importance in social relationships of the exchange of information by non-verbal gestures and expressions, though long appreciated by artists and writers, has only recently become the subject of serious scientific study. The subject has been approached from different angles by psychologists studying the relevance of non-verbal communication to interpersonal relationships, by anthropologists interested in how these processes help to integrate societies, and by ethologists extrapolating the results of animal studies to human behaviour. The scope of the volume ranges from formal analysis of the communication process by an information theorist (Professor Mackay) and by a linguist (Professor Lyons), to accounts of the role of expression in the theatre (Dr Jonathan Miller) and in the visual arts (Professor Gombrich). There are contributions to the discussion written from the point of view of the zoologist, the ethologist, the psychologist and anthropologist. |
Inhalt
Formal Analysis of Communicative Processes | 3 |
The Comparison of Vocal Communication in Animals and Man | 27 |
Human Language | 49 |
Comments on Part A | 86 |
COMMUNICATION IN ANIMALS | 99 |
Some Principles of Animal Communication | 101 |
Comments | 122 |
The Lower Vertebrates and the Invertebrates | 127 |
Comments | 268 |
Nonverbal Communication in Children | 271 |
Comments | 296 |
Similarities and Differences between Cultures in Expressive Movements | 297 |
Comments | 312 |
The Influence of Cultural Context on Nonverbal Communication in Man | 315 |
Comments | 344 |
Nonverbal Communication in the Mentally Ill | 349 |
Comments | 150 |
Vocal Communication in Birds | 153 |
Comments | 175 |
Preface | 177 |
The Information Potentially Available in Mammal Displays | 179 |
Comments | 204 |
NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION IN MAN | 207 |
A Comparative Approach to the Phylogeny of Laughter and Smiling | 209 |
Comments | 238 |
Nonverbal Communication in Human Social Interaction | 243 |
Comments | 358 |
Plays and Players | 359 |
Action and Expression in Western Art | 373 |
Comments on Chapters 14 and 15 | 393 |
Epilogue | 395 |
396 | |
Author index | 425 |
431 | |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acrasin action actor adults aggressive analysis Andrew animal animal communication approach Argyle associated birds Blurton Jones causation chaffinch Chapter cheremes chimpanzee complex context control theory correlated cultural described discussed distinction effect Eibl-Eibesfeldt elements emotional ethologists evidence evoked example expressive movements facial expressions fact female frequency function gannets gestures grammatical Hooff human language important individual instance interaction interpreted involved kind laugh laughter and smiling linguistic Lyons male mammals meaning metonymic non-verbal communication non-verbal signals normal observed occur organism paralinguistic particular performance pheromones phylogenetic play possible posture primates prosodic question recognition refer reflex relaxed open-mouth display responses ritual ritualised Sandwich tern semiotic sense sequences sexual silent bared-teeth display similar situations social behaviour song sounds species speech stimuli structure suggest symbolic Theropithecus Thorpe tion utterances verbal communication vertebral column vocal vocalisation waggle dance Washoe words
Verweise auf dieses Buch
Politeness: Some Universals in Language Usage Penelope Brown,Stephen C. Levinson Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1987 |
Discourse Analysis: The Sociolinguistic Analysis of Natural Language Michael Stubbs Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1983 |