Visible Acts of Meaning
Top Cited Papers
- 1 June 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Language and Social Psychology
- Vol. 19 (2) , 163-194
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0261927x00019002001
Abstract
The authors propose that dialogue in face-to-face interaction is both audible and visible; language use in this setting includes visible acts of meaning such as facial displays and hand gestures. Several criteria distinguish these from other nonverbal acts: (a) They are sensitive to a sender-receiver relationship in that they are less likely to occur when an addressee will not see them, (b) they are analogically encoded symbols, (c) their meaning can be explicated or demonstrated in context, and (d) they are fully integrated with the accompanying words, although they may be redundant or nonredundant with these words. For these particular acts, the authors eschew the term nonverbal communication because it is a negative definition based solely on physical source. Instead, they propose an integrated message model in which the moment-by-moment audible and visible communicative acts are treated as a unified whole.This publication has 58 references indexed in Scilit:
- Gestures as Part of Speech: Methodological ImplicationsResearch on Language and Social Interaction, 1994
- Do Gestures Communicate? A ReviewResearch on Language and Social Interaction, 1994
- Interactive gesturesDiscourse Processes, 1992
- Discourse‐oriented facial displays in conversationResearch on Language and Social Interaction, 1991
- The interconnection of utterances and nonverbal displaysResearch on Language and Social Interaction, 1987
- The social history ofthe natural history of an interview: A multidisciplinary investigation of social communicationResearch on Language and Social Interaction, 1987
- Gestures as a resource for the organization of mutual orientationSemiotica, 1986
- Interactive functions and limitations of verbal and nonverbal behaviors in natural conversationSemiotica, 1980
- Facial Emblems of ‘Right’ and ‘Wrong’: Topographical Analysis and Derivation of a Recognition TestSemiotica, 1979
- Human communication: Behavioral programs and their integration in interactionBehavioral Science, 1968