Saturday, 17 July 2021

NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION - UNDERSTANDING OTHERS

Give a detailed account of nonverbal communication as a process to understand others.

Social perception is the process through which we seek to know and understand other persons. We attempt to understand others by two basic processes:

Nonverbal communication – which is used to understand current mods and feelings of others.

Attribution – which is used to understand more lasting causes of human behavior.

 

Nonverbal communication – Communication between individual that does not involve the content of spoken language but relies instead on an unspoken language of social expression, eye contact and body language. The basic channels of nonverbal communication are facial expressions, eye contact, body movement, touch, etc.

Facial expressions – There are six different basic emotions that can be clearly represented on the human face – Happiness, surprise, anger, sadness, disgust and fear. It is interesting to note that emotions occur in many combinations like joy mingled with sorrow.

Link between emotions and expression – Cacioppo 1988 undertook the following research study in the field of facial expressions to check whether there is any link between emotions and expressions.

Aim of the research – To study the link between facial expression and underlying emotions and to know whether facial expressions really reflect underlying emotions.

Research method / design –

Step 1 – Subjects were asked to move various facial muscles and make or construct certain facial configuration.

Step 2 – While subjects were producing facial configuration, their physiological reaction were being recorded (heart rate, pulse rate, level of perspiration).

Step 3 – Subjects were also supposed to report whether they underwent any emotional changes while making various configurations.

Result – Results of the research indicate that different facial movements are accompanied by changes in physiological activities. The facial expression of fear is accompanied by high heart rate, increased pulse rate and supported by increase in perspiration. Researchers found out that the more closely the facial movement resembles expression associated with specific emotion, the greater tendency for participants to report experiencing that emotion. Their finding suggests that a substantial link exist between facial expression and underlying emotions.

Universality of facial expression – Ekman 1989 reported that people of one culture can easily recognize expression of members from other cultures. To gather evidence the researchers traveled to isolated areas of New Guinea and asked persons living there to imagine various emotion – evoking events e.g., friend visits, dead animal, - then the participants in the research were asked to show by their facial expression how they would feel in each case. These expressions were very similar to ones that would be shown by us. Therefore, this research established the fact that there is universality of facial expression. Many cross-cultural studies point out that between each culture there is slight variations regarding how various emotions should be expressed, these are known as Display Rules.

Rosenberg and Ekman conducted a detailed research to check the universality of facial expression. The research is as follows:

Aim of study – To check whether participants from different cultures show accuracy in identifying and underlying emotions.

Research design –

Step 1 – Participants view photographs of strangers from different cultures showing various facial expressions.

Step 2 – Participants were asked to identify the facial expression and underlying emotion by using anyone of the following technique:

a.    Seven alternative condition (subjects were required to explain underlying emotions by the emotional labels given to them of happiness, sadness, disgust, etc.)

b.    Seven stories condition (subjects were provided with seven different stories with different emotional content, explain each facial expression with help of story provided).

c.    Free choice condition (Subjects can use their own description to explain the expression of strangers in the photograph).

Results – The results of the research indicate that regardless of the specific technique used, facial expression were readily recognized as reflecting certain specific emotions. Therefore, irrespective of the cultural differences’ subjects were able to judge the emotions depicted very accurately.

 

Eye contact – We often learn much about others feelings from their eyes. Eye contact is classified as – stare, gazing.

A stare is a form of eye contact in which one person continues to gaze steadily at another regardless of what the recipient does. It is often interpreted as a sign of anger or hostility – like cold stare. We interpret a single level of gazing form others as a sign of friendliness. In contrast, if others avoid eye contact with us we may conclude that they are unfriendly.

 

Body language – gestures, posture and movement

Body language are cues provided by the position, posture and movement of others body or body parts. It also reveals others emotional states, tehri current moods and intentions.

A research by Aronoff signifies the role of body movement in dance drama.

Aim – To check whether different body movements are depicted by different characters in dance dramas.

Research design –

Step 1 – they first identified two groups of characters in classical ballet – those who played a dangerous and threatening role and those who played warm sympathetic roles.

Step 2 – They examined examples of dancing by their character in actual ballets to see if they adopted different kinds of postures.

Results –

The dangerous and threatening characters showed more diagonal and angular postures.

The warm, sympathetic characters showed more rounded postures.

Further evidence for the conclusion that body posture and movement can be an important source of information about others is provided by a research by Lynard Mynier (1993).

Aim – To check whether body movement of body language is an important source of information about others’ emotions and traits.

Research design – Researchers identified certain restaurants and manipulated the situation to suit the research study.

The customers (subjects) were exposed to two different conditions: S1 exposed to profession and unfriendly waitress. S2 exposed to friendly and warm waitress.

S1 was exposed to waitress who stood and took orders without forming any eye contact with S1 group. However waitress in S2 sat beside the customers to take orders. They also formed a great amount of eye contact with their customers – sitting is regarded as a positive gesture because it initiates close proximity and also increased eye contact is taken as a gesture of friendliness. Reaction of the subjects were assessed by the amount of tip they gave to the waitress.

Results – Results of the research indicated that S1 group of subjects which were exposed to unfriendly behavior reciprocated in the same manner by giving very low tips. On the other hand, S2 group of subjects who were exposed to warm and friendly waitress reciprocated in the same manner by giving hefty tips to waitress.

To conclude therefore we can say that body language gives us substantial information about others emotions and whatever emotion is shown to the target person it is also reciprocated in the same manner.

 

Touch – Physical contact between two individuals – it is the most intimate form of Nonverbal communication.

To interpret touch we have to focus our attention on:

Source of touch i.e., who does the touching (a friend, stranger, persons of ones own sex or the other).

Length and nature of touch i.e., brief or prolonged, gentle or rough.

The context in which the touch occurs i.e., business, or social setting, doctor’s office.

Depending on such factors touch can suggest affection, sexual interest, dominance, caring or even aggression.

Researchers Cruso and Wetzel have given evidence that when touching is considered acceptable, positive reaction often results.

Aim – To check whether positive touching behavior is reciprocated positively.

Research design –

Step 1 – the researchers arranged for waitress working in two different restaurants to interact with customers in one of the three different ways when giving them their charge.

No-contact condition – refrained from touching the customer in any manner.

Brief contact condition – touched them briefly on hand (about 0.5 sec).

Prolonged contact condition – touched them for somewhat longer period (1.0 to 1.5 sec)

Groups          condition                   result

S1                  no contact                low tip

S2                  brief contact             moderate tip

S3                  prolong contact        highest tip   

Behavior was recorded on the amount of tips given.

Results –

Customers who were exposed to the waitress who had no contact with them gave the lowest tip.

Customers who were exposed to the waitress who had brief contact with them gave them moderate tip.

Customers who were exposed to the waitress who had prolonged contact with them gave them the highest tip.

 

Gender differences in touch – Does one gender initiate more touching behavior than the other? Research findings indicate that the answer depends on age. Among grownup couples, males are more likely to touch females than vice versa. As age increases, this difference shrinks among the older couples i.e., 40 and above the opposite is true i.e., females engage in touching. This is so because of one possibility that among younger couples’ relationships are yet not well established and society gives sanction to males to indulge in such behavior. However, as age progresses, women’s touching behavior is taken more as a caring gesture.

 

Individual differences in emotional expressiveness

The extent to which persons who outward expressions of the inner feelings is called emotional expressiveness. Friedman administered a test of emotional expressiveness to several college students. They answered questions on their personal life. In additional research the investigators related scores on the test of emotional expressiveness to success in several occupations. They found that among physicians those scoring high on expressiveness were more popular with their patients than coming low on this dimension.

Detection of deception

This relates to techniques used to find out if the other person is lying.

Micro expression – One nonverbal contact that is very helpful to detect if the other person is lying is micro expression. They are brief and incomplete facial expressions that occur on individuals faces very quickly after exposure to a specific stimulus and before other expressions are used to conceal them. They last for only two tenths of a second.

Inter channel discrepancy – A second nonverbal contact is inter channel discrepancies. There are different channels of nonverbal communication i.e., facial expression, eye contact, body movement. It is impossible for individuals to control all of these channels at once. A person may be able to control his facial expression and eye contact but may not be able to control his body movement. This could be possible with any of the three.

Nonverbal aspects of speech – A third nonverbal contact involves nonverbal aspects of people’s speech i.e., para language when people lie their pitch of voices often rise and they tend to speak more slowly and with less fluency. They engage in more sentence repairing behavior i.e., they start a sentence, then interrupt it and then start again.

Aspect of eye contact – The fourth technique of deception is frequently revealed by various aspects of eye contact. Persons who are lying often blink more frequently and show pupils that are more decollated. They may also show unusually low level of eye contact or an unusually high one.

Facial expression – The fifth technique is that people who are lying sometimes show exaggerated facial expression e.g., they may smile more than usual or may show greater sorrow.

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