Non-verbal Communication and Language

Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 10:63-78 (1976)
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Abstract

Human communication consists of an intricate combination of verbal and non-verbal signals. We shall see that the verbal aspects of messages are elaborated and supported in a number of ways by non-verbal ones. In order to understand human verbal communication we need to know about these non-verbal components. Non-verbal communication can be studied experimentally as a problem in encoding and decoding; it can also be studied as part of a sequence, using the methods of ethology or of linguistics. We shall see that this kind of analysis has theoretical implications about the nature of human communication, and has practical implications in a number of fields.

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Non-verbal Communication and Language.Michael Argyle - 1976 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Lectures 10:63-78.
Psycholinguistics: Competence and Performance.Judith Greene - 1976 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 10:79-90.

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Philosophy in a New Key. [REVIEW]Dewitt H. Parker - 1943 - Philosophical Review 52 (3):306.

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