Nonverbal Communication

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Alarm Calls
Angry Faces
Animal Signals
bared
Bared Teeth Display
biological basis of social interaction
Bobwhite Quail
Capuchin Monkeys
Category=JBF
Category=JMAL
Category=PSV
developmental psychology
display
duchenne
Duchenne Smile
emotional expression
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
eq_society-politics
evolutionary psychology
Facial EMG
Facial Expression Stimuli
facial recognition research
FACS
Group Fitness
Homosapiens Sapiens
hooff
Leopard Alarm Calls
Levator Labii Superioris Alaeque Nasi
monkeys
Nonsocial Situation
Peter Moln?#N
Peter Moln?#N/A
Peter Moln?#NA
Played Back
primate communication
Relaxed Open Mouth
Relaxed Open Mouth Display
Rhesus Monkey
Rhesus Monkey Infants
silent
Silent Bared Teeth Display
smile
sociocultural behaviour
teeth
Tonkean Macaques
Ullica Segerstr
Ullica Segerstrale
van
Van Hooff
vervet
Vocal Auditory Channel
Zygomatic Muscle

Product details

  • ISBN 9780815373278
  • Weight: 750g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Feb 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The field of nonverbal communication is a strategic site for demonstrating the inextricable interrelationship between nature and culture in human behaviour. This book, originally published in 1997, aims to explode the misconception that "biology" is something that automatically precludes or excludes "culture". Instead, it points to the necessary grounding of our social and cultural capabilities in biological givens and elucidates how biological factors are systematically co-opted for cultural purposes.

The book presents a complex picture of human communicative ability as simultaneously biologically and socioculturally influenced, with some capacities apparently more biologically hard-wired than others: face recognition, imitation, emotional communication, and the capacity for language. It also suggests that the dividing line between nonverbal and linguistic communication is becoming much less clear-cut.

The contributing authors are leading researchers in a variety of fields, writing here for a general audience. The book is divided into sections dealing with, respectively, human universals, evolutionary and developmental aspects of nonverbal behaviour within a sociocultural context, and finally, the multifaceted relationships between nonverbal communication and culture.

Ullica Segerstrale and Peter Molnar