Gender and Nonverbal BehaviorClara Mayo, Nancy Henley Springer-Verlag, 1981 - 284 sayfa |
Kitabın içinden
31 sonuçtan 1-3 arası sonuçlar
Sayfa 140
Clara Mayo, Nancy Henley. 1 Extent of smiling was obtained by dividing total smiling time duration by non- speaking time duration . Extent of filled pausing was the total number of coded instances divided by speaking time duration ...
Clara Mayo, Nancy Henley. 1 Extent of smiling was obtained by dividing total smiling time duration by non- speaking time duration . Extent of filled pausing was the total number of coded instances divided by speaking time duration ...
Sayfa 142
Clara Mayo, Nancy Henley. terparts . An identical pattern was in evidence for smiling : feminine females smiled significantly more than masculine males with androgynous males smiling more than masculine males , and androgynous females ...
Clara Mayo, Nancy Henley. terparts . An identical pattern was in evidence for smiling : feminine females smiled significantly more than masculine males with androgynous males smiling more than masculine males , and androgynous females ...
Sayfa 146
... smiling by androgynous females may represent an aversion to behavior which can be regarded negatively if carried on too long . For example , filled paus- ing has been described as indicating an attempt to hold the conversational floor ...
... smiling by androgynous females may represent an aversion to behavior which can be regarded negatively if carried on too long . For example , filled paus- ing has been described as indicating an attempt to hold the conversational floor ...
İçindekiler
Barrier or Agent for Sex Role Change? | 3 |
Evidence for Nonverbal Supports for Change | 9 |
Gender Patterns in Touching Behavior | 15 |
Telif Hakkı | |
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androgynous females androgynous individuals androgynous males assumptions boys BSRI chapter client Clinical Psychology cross-sex cues cultural decoding developmental Developmental Psychology differences in nonverbal differential dyads effects emotional example eye contact facial expression feelings feminine females feminism Feminist Therapy filled pauses gender differences gender display gestures girls Goffman Helmreich Henley heterosexual hypothesis Ickes indicates infants instrumental interpersonal interpretation Journal of Personality Kerl LaFrance leadership lesbians lesbians and gay less level of interaction looking magazine advertisements male and female masculine masculine and feminine masculine males measure mixed-sex group mothers neotenic nonverbal behavior nonverbal communication nonverbal signals paralinguistic partner patterns Personality and Social position rated response same-sex scores sex differences sex role sex-role sex-role orientation sex-typed sexual situation smiling Social Psychology Spence ST-ST status stereotypes stimulus subjects suggest therapist tion touch toucher traditional variables verbal visual behavior visual dominance woman women