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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 12 page paper that provides an overview of nonverbal communication and considers it in terms of the way both men and women encode and decode these messages. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Page Count:
12 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Verbgend.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
individuals provide information and also in the way in which that information is perceived. One of the most distinct areas of communication in which men and women demonstrate considerable
differences is in the use of nonverbal communication. Although some theorists have suggested that differences in nonverbal communication are more an aspect of social stereotyping rather than based on
innate gender differences, there is considerable evidence in the current literature that supports the fact that gender-based differences in nonverbal communication exist outside of the scope of gender-stereotyping. An understanding
of the different elements of gender-based nonverbal communication is important in order to provide a means by which to understand the physical representations that people provide and to understand their
impacts. Politicians, for example, utilized visual images and nonverbal representations in order to persuade and underscore their basic premises, and the differences in gender-based nonverbal communication often play a
part nonverbal choices that these individuals make (McDonald A6). In other words, nonverbal communication impacts a number of different perceptions and a greater understanding of its implications for messaging
in general can benefit an understanding of communication processes as a whole. II. Nonverbal Communication: Differences and Stereotyping Generally speaking, nonverbal communication falls into three basic categories:
sign language, action language, and object language (Tubbs and Moss 146). When a person utilizes sign language, they use specific gestures deliberately as a means of replacing words,
and many of these representations are universal, like the holding up of two fingers to represent the number two (Tubbs and Moss 146). Action language is all of the
other movements that a person creates in the course of interaction that do not fall into the category of sign language, and includes things like posturing and winking (Tubbs and
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