Gender and Nonverbal BehaviorC. Mayo, N. M. Henley Springer Science & Business Media, 6 Ara 2012 - 284 sayfa This book addresses two lively and active research communities, those concerned with issues of gender and those dealing with nonverbal behavior. The wide range of professional and popular interest in both these topics convinced us that presen tations of current work by researchers who bring these two areas of research together would prove stimulating. These presentations not only address the state of current work on gender and nonverbal behavior, but also suggest new avenues of investigation for those interested primarily in either topic. In other words, the questions that nonverbal communication researchers address when considering gender bring new directions to gender-related research and a like effect can be expected when the questions raised in gender studies are applied to research in nonverbal behavior. Dispersion of ideas may take another form as well. Both gender and nonverbal behavior research are notably interdisciplinary. Perhaps because of their pervasive nature, both topics have attracted the attention of a diversity of scholars. Most of the contributions in the present volume are by psychologists, but their intended audience is broad. Linguists, sociologists, and anthropologists are among those who share similar research interests. Moreover, the ideas presented here are of interest to practitioners as well as scholars. From corporations to clinics, people are interested in the subtle expression and negotiation of sex roles through non verbal communication. |
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34 sonuçtan 1-5 arası sonuçlar
Sayfa viii
... LaFrance Gender Gestures Are Variable ... The Social Psychology of Gender Gestures . Issues in Conceptualizing Gender Display Evidence Relevant to Gender Display 8. Gender , Androgyny , and Conversational Assertiveness .. Faye Crosby ...
... LaFrance Gender Gestures Are Variable ... The Social Psychology of Gender Gestures . Issues in Conceptualizing Gender Display Evidence Relevant to Gender Display 8. Gender , Androgyny , and Conversational Assertiveness .. Faye Crosby ...
Sayfa xi
... University of Illinois , Champaign , Illinois , U.S.A. Marianne LaFrance , Department of Psychology , Boston College , Chestnut Hill , Massachusetts , U.S.A. Bernice Lott , Department of Psychology , University of Rhode Contributors.
... University of Illinois , Champaign , Illinois , U.S.A. Marianne LaFrance , Department of Psychology , Boston College , Chestnut Hill , Massachusetts , U.S.A. Bernice Lott , Department of Psychology , University of Rhode Contributors.
Sayfa 4
... ( LaFrance & Mayo , 1978 ) . It is when another manifests too much or too little of an expected nonverbal behavior or violates expected timing by pro- ducing the behavior too soon or too late that we notice and question its meaning . It ...
... ( LaFrance & Mayo , 1978 ) . It is when another manifests too much or too little of an expected nonverbal behavior or violates expected timing by pro- ducing the behavior too soon or too late that we notice and question its meaning . It ...
Sayfa 5
... LaFrance & Mayo , 1978 ) . Less clear is the degree to which this affects change . An individual contemplating deliberate change of her or his own nonverbal behavior would need to go through a process of making the unconscious conscious ...
... LaFrance & Mayo , 1978 ) . Less clear is the degree to which this affects change . An individual contemplating deliberate change of her or his own nonverbal behavior would need to go through a process of making the unconscious conscious ...
Sayfa 10
... LaFrance ( Chapter 7 ) . Placing sex - typed and androgynous women and men in instrumental and interpersonal situations , LaFrance found that the sex - typed treated the typical nonverbal behavior of their own and the other sex as ...
... LaFrance ( Chapter 7 ) . Placing sex - typed and androgynous women and men in instrumental and interpersonal situations , LaFrance found that the sex - typed treated the typical nonverbal behavior of their own and the other sex as ...
İçindekiler
3 | |
9 | |
17 | |
How Does Touch Feel? Gender Patterns in Reactions to Being | 27 |
Implications for Future Research | 33 |
A Nonverbal Leadership Cue | 40 |
Visual Behavior and Dominance in Women and Men | 63 |
Sex Differences in Body Movements and Positions 81 | 80 |
Expressiveness in Infancy and Childhood | 195 |
Summary Integration and Conclusions | 201 |
A View From American Magazine | 209 |
Adolescence | 218 |
Young Adulthood | 226 |
Middle Age | 238 |
Old Age and Senility | 244 |
Nonverbal Behavior and LesbianGay Orientation | 253 |
A Theoretical Model | 95 |
Sex SexRole and Nonverbal Communication | 129 |
Evidence Relevant to Gender Display | 136 |
Gender Androgyny and Conversational Assertiveness | 151 |
Nonverbal Processes in Feminist Therapy 261 | 260 |
Author Index | 271 |
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androgynous females androgynous individuals androgynous males ascribed status assumption attributions boys BSRI client Clinical Psychology cross-sex cues cultural decoding developmental Developmental Psychology differences in nonverbal differential dyad types effects emotional Experiment eye contact female register feminine females feminism Feminist Therapy filled pauses gaze gender differences gender display girls head Helmreich Henley hypothesis Ickes infants interactional involvement interpersonal interpretation Journal of Personality LaFrance leadership lesbians lesbians and gay less level of interaction magazine advertisements male and female masculine and feminine masculine males measures mixed-sex group nonverbal behavior nonverbal communication observed paralanguage paralinguistic partner patterns perceptions Personality and Social position rated responses same-sex scores sex differences sex role sex-role orientation sex-role stereotypes sex-typed sexual signals significantly situation situationally smiling Social Psychology Spence status stimulus subjects suggest therapist tion touch toucher traditional variables verbal videotapes visual behavior visual dominance woman women