comparing nonverbal and verbal codes

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Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

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Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes. A woman without her man is helpless. A woman, without her, man is helpless. Channel Reliance Research. Research paradigms a. Experimental b. Natural observations c. Meta-analysis. Channel Reliance Research. Propositions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Page 2: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

A woman without her man is helpless.

Page 3: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

A woman, without her, man is helpless.

Page 4: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Channel Reliance Research

• Research paradigmsa. Experimental

b. Natural observations

c. Meta-analysis

Page 5: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Channel Reliance Research

• Propositions– Adults rely more on NV than V; children rely more on V. – Reliance on NV is greater when the V & NV conflict. – Reliance depends on function at stake. – Information averaging when channels are congruent.– Variability in info processing and reliance on extreme or

negative cues when content is incongruent. – Individuals biases in channel dependence.

Page 6: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Channel Reliance Research

• Reasons for differential and variable reliance?

Page 7: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Coding Properties: Analogic versus Digital

• Digital systems– discrete

– arbitrary

– finite

• Analogic systems– continuous

– natural

– infinite

Need to distinguish code properties from interpretive processes

Page 8: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Coding Properties: Buck’s Approach

• Spontaneous communication– biologically-based – spontaneous– signs– nonpropositional – right-hemispheric

processing

• Symbolic communication– socially shared – intentional– symbols– propositional– left-hemispheric

processing

Page 9: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Coding Properties: Design Features of Codes

Discrete v. continuous

Symbolic (extrinsic) v. sign (intrinsic)

Iconicity

Syntax rules

Transformation

Semantic rules

Pragmatic rules

Productivity

Polysemy

Universal v. culture- and context-bound meaning

Displacement

Reflexivity

Prevarication

Coherence mechanisms

Direct v. mediated response

Page 10: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Applicability to Verbal versus Nonverbal Coding

Discrete v. continuous

Symbolic v. sign

Iconicity

Syntax rules

Transformation

Semantic rules

Pragmatic rules

Productivity

Polysemy

Universal v. culture- and context-bound meaning

Displacement

Reflexivity

Prevarication

Coherence mechanisms

Direct v. mediated response

Page 11: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Origins of Verbal and Nonverbal Behavior

• Alternative possibilities– Exclusively nurture (totally learned)– Physiological/anatomical predispositions but learned

performance– Universal needs but variability in environmental

influences on enactment– Exclusively nature (innate and part of biological heritage)

Page 12: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Origins of Verbal and Nonverbal Behavior

• Types of evidence– Comparative studies (primates, other vertebrates)

e.g., laughing, smiling, threat stare, grooming, fright vocalizations, spacing patterns

– Child development researchstages of normal development common to all

reflexive behaviors present in all infants (crying, toe curling, grasping)

observations of blind, deaf, and limbless children

Page 13: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Origins of Verbal and Nonverbal Behavior

• Types of evidence– Comparative studies (primates, other vertebrates)– Child development research– Cross-cultural studies

Page 14: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Origins of Verbal and Nonverbal Behavior

• Conclusions about nonverbal/verbal differences– verbal– nonverbal

Page 15: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Neurophysiological Processing

• Early/traditional views of hemispheric processing– bicameral brain function--horizontal perspective – high lateralization--strong differentiation of functions– analytic/holistic dichotomy– NV defined according to where it is processed

Page 16: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Neurophysiological Processing

• Contemporary views– triune brain function--vertical perspective

• R-complex (brainstem, cerebellum)• paleomammalian brain (limbic system--

thalamus, hypothalamus, pituitary, amygdala, hippocampus, olfactory cortex surrounding the R-complex)

• neomammalian brain (cerebral cortex)

Page 17: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Neurophysiological Processing

• Contemporary views– interdependence & coordination of functions

• coordinated via corpus collosum• relative, not absolute, dominance• right hemisphere is essential for many linguistic

activities• people with left hemisphere damage able to decode

with right hemisphere

Page 18: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Neurophysiological Processing

• Contemporary views– lability in handling other hemisphere’s functions– cultural and style differences– two hemispheres communicate with each other– dominance depends on nature of signal

Page 19: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

• Perception by right hemisphere

melodies, music

tonal patternspitch, rate, volumelaughing, cryingcoughingemotional stimulidistinguishing fingersrecognition of facesfamiliar environmental noises

location of geometric formsdepth perceptionrecognition of space & formtopographic memoryspatial disorientationbody type distortionsletters matched to wordsimagery recall strategies

Page 20: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

• Perception by left hemisphere

vowelsspoken digitsrhythmic patternssemantic units (words)nonsense wordsfunction wordslettersverbal tasks

visual verbal materialfree movement during speechskilled movementspictures matched to letterssubvocal rehearsal recall

strategiesmusic perceived as notes

Page 21: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

• Encoding by right hemisphere

automatic speech

serial speech (alphabet)

social gestural speech

strong emotional utterances

artistic ability

model building

Page 22: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

• Encoding by left hemisphere

free movement during speech

Page 23: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Relationship of Gestures to Language

• Semiotic Functions– Ekman & Friesen approach– Scherer linguistic approach

• semantic

• syntactic

• pragmatic

• dialogic

– McNeill information-processing approach

Page 24: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Relationship of Gestures to Language

• development of interactional nonverbal cues (e.g., gestures) coincides with the development of language

• baseball theory--stone throwing/gestures and language development

Page 25: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Message Production

• gestures that relate to speech– ones referring to the ideational process– gestures referring to the object: depictive gestures– gestures referring to the object: evocative kinds

Page 26: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Message Production

• Gestures and speech flow– hierarchical nature of language – phonemic clauses and chunking of speech– gestures preceding speech, priming the pump– illustrator gestures that trace thought

Page 27: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Message Production

• Nonverbal cues and cognitive effort– indicators of cognitive difficulty and effort– indicators of level of abstraction

Page 28: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Message Processing and Decoding

• Definition– How humans acquire, store, retrieve, and use

information; how information is gleaned from messages and interpreted

Page 29: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Message Processing and Decoding

• Related to:– attention and priming– comprehension and memory storage– recall– inference-making

Page 30: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Message Processing and Decoding

• Nonverbal cues of attention, priming and distraction– vocal cues– immediacy cues– facial and gestural cues– physical appearance– environmental influences

Page 31: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Message Processing and Decoding

• Nonverbal cues related to comprehension, storage and recall– paralinguistic and parakinesic cues– speech primacy gestures (illustrators)– motor primacy gestures (emblems)– incongruent messages– speaker self-synchrony– interactional synchrony

Page 32: Comparing Nonverbal and Verbal Codes

Message Processing and Decoding

• Cues in inference-making– nonverbal impressions