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  2. Backchannel (linguistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backchannel_(linguistics)

    A backchannel response can be verbal, non-verbal, or both. Backchannel responses are often phatic expressions, primarily serving a social or meta-conversational purpose, such as signifying the listener's attention, understanding, sympathy, or agreement, rather than conveying significant information. Examples of backchanneling in English include ...

  3. Social cue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_cue

    Other than facial expressions, body language and posture are the main non-verbal social cues that we use. [25] For instance, body language can be used to establish personal space, which is the amount of space needed for oneself in order to be comfortable. Taking a step back can therefore be a social cue indicating a violation of personal space.

  4. Nonverbal communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonverbal_communication

    E-mails, web chats, and the social media have options to change text font colours, stationery, add emoticons, capitalization, and pictures in order to capture non-verbal cues into a verbal medium. [11] "Non-verbal behaviours are multifunctional." [12] Many different non-verbal channels are engaged at the same time in communication acts and ...

  5. Nonverbal influence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonverbal_Influence

    The major avenue for the communication of power, dominance, status. There are several avenues that display non-verbal behavior. These non-verbal expressions are conveyed through kinesics, proxemics, physical appearance and artifacts, and chronemics. Kinesics is a complex method in communicating dominance and status through eye contact.

  6. Adam Kendon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adam_Kendon

    Adam Kendon (4 April 1934 – 14 September 2022) was one of the world's foremost authorities on the topic of gesture, which he viewed broadly as meaning all the ways in which humans use visible bodily action in creating utterances including not only how this is done in speakers but also in the way it is used in speakers or signers when only visible bodily action is available for expression.

  7. S. Chand Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S._Chand_Group

    Advanced Inorganic Chemistry (R. D. Madan) Mathematics Today for ICSE (O. P. Malhotra, S. K. Gupta, Anubhuti Gangal) Language of Chemistry or Chemical Equations (G. D. Tuli, P. L. Soni) Wren and Martin High School English Grammar & Composition; Verbal & Non-Verbal Reasoning (R. S. Aggarwal) Nuclear Physics; Indian Economics; Data Structures ...

  8. Symbolic communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbolic_communication

    Unlike verbal symbolic communication, however, nonverbal symbolic communication does not make use of words. Instead, icons, indices or symbols may be used. [17] Nonverbal symbolic communication is not to be confused with nonverbal communication (NVC), which is a broader category that includes nonsymbolic communication as well as symbolic.

  9. Albert Mehrabian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Mehrabian

    Subsequent studies have examined the relative impact of verbal and nonverbal signals in more natural settings. For example, a study in 1970 used video tapes to analyze the communication of submissive/dominant attitudes and found that all types of nonverbal cues, [9] particularly body posture, had a 4.3 times greater impact than verbal cues.