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Hardcover Nonverbal Communication: Forms and Functions Book

ISBN: 1577665430

ISBN13: 9781577665434

Nonverbal Communication: Forms and Functions

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

Presents current theories and research in nonverbal communication. The author looks at the functions of nonverbal communication including power, intimacy, and deception; nonverbal reactions to stress,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

The Best out there!!

This book have been used in my nonverbal communication course at a state university and it was a great choice. It covers the major general understanding of nonverbal communication so that you have a very strong foundation. And I mean strong foundation since you are then able to be creative and go on instinct with the basics. Other books just tell you specific postures mean this and that. This book focuses alot on principles. That's why it's titled form and function. Get the structure understanding behind nonverbal communication so that you don't have to memorize posture. I haven't found any other book that is as comprehensive and easy to grapse as this book. The book is known to be equivalent to cover BA curriculum on nonverbal communication.

Brilliant, thorough analysis of nonverbal communication

Dr. Peter A. Andersen is a distinguished, international scholar from the San Diego State University (SDSU) School of Communication. As author of over 100 book chapters, research papers, and journal articles, he is one of the most published scholars in the field of communication. Dr. Andersen has consulted for dozens of school districts, child-care centers, health organizations, political campaigns, universities, and business organizations. He has served as first Vice President of the Western Communication Association, as editor of the Western Journal of Communication, and as first Director of Research for the Japan-U.S. Telecommunications Research Institute, a program of SDSU's International Center. He teaches courses in many areas of interpersonal and mass communication, including a course entitled, "Communication and Virtual Reality." Dr. Andersen's book, Nonverbal Communication, has been used for courses in that subject on university campuses all across the country. It is held in high esteem by his fellow communication professors as an accurate, authoritative overview of the major, scientific findings in this area of study. But this book isn't only for current or past college students who are accustomed to wading through challenging textbooks. Dr. Andersen's writing is amazingly clear, direct and accessible for such a comprehensive, impeccably documented scholarly work. This 394-page, large-format trade paperback has 40 pages of references (a gold mine of further-information possibilities). There is also an 8-page index to help you quickly search out specific issues that interest you most. The topics covered in the book regarding nonverbal communication (NVC) include the following: the definition of NVC and how it is different from verbal communication; how the body is involved (facial expressions, hand and arm gestures, eye contact and movements, personal space, touching); the impact of environment (seating, temperature, color, lighting, sound); timing and speed; cultural cues; gender and sex; emotions and stress; immediacy (friendly, warm, involving actions); intimate relationships; persuasion, deception, and power.Here is a sampling of quotes from the book:"?A basic set of at least six facial expressions?are innate, universal, and carry the same [essential] meaning throughout the world." This suggests that "basic expressions are not learned but are part of an innate [genetic/biological] system of communication." These "six basic facial expressions are pancultural and universal: happiness, sadness, fear, anger, disgust and surprise.""Smiling is primarily a function of other people's presence and not [one's own] internal emotional states?.The more involved people are with another person, the more they smile [around them].""Becoming an adult [in essentially all cultures] requires manifesting fewer outward emotions, particularly for men. Unfortunately, failing to express emotions [can] cause an increase in?stress and disease.""Emotions evolved
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