Social Psychology
Smiling and Head Tilting
Importance in nonverbal communication according to Brazilian study
The Nature of Rapport and Its Nonverbal Correlates
Defining and developing rapport
Nonverbal correlates of rapport
Method for Teaching About Verbal and Nonverbal Communication
Instructional techniques that make use of the Interpersonal Perception Task (IPT)
Instructional uses of the IPT
Evaluation of the IPT as a teaching method
NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION
The purpose of this paper is to introduce, discuss, and analyze three journal articles on nonverbal communication. Specifically, it will contain a written review summarizing what the studies were, and what their findings were.
NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION
The first journal article profiled a study on head tilting and smiling, and what effect it had on the perception of the person. The importance of this study is two-fold. First, there had been few studies on smiling and the perception of smiling before this study was completed, and most of the studies did not concentrate on different ways of smiling or moving the head. Secondly, this study focused on how these gestures are considered "micropolitical," and so a strong form of nonverbal communication between people. The researchers used four different types of smiles, from none, to a broad smile, and two different head postures, and made slides of each combination, which they showed to a panel of subjects. "The combination of the four levels of facial expression with the two levels of head posture resulted in a total of 8 slides of each stimulus person" (Otta et al. 325). They also used "average" looking people, so the results would not be skewed by a person's attractiveness or appeal.
Ultimately, the researchers discovered that head posture had a "weaker" effect on the viewer than smiling did. What this shows is how powerful nonverbal communication can be, even when first meeting a person. How we perceive their movements...
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