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Contributions of the German “Expression Psychology” to nonverbal communication research. Part III: Gait, gestures, and body movement

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CONTRIBUTORS:
  Author Wallbott, Harald G (b. 1952, d. ----)
JOURNAL:
  Journal of nonverbal behavior, 7(1), 20 - 32.
YEAR: 1982
PUB TYPE: Journal Article
SUBJECT(S): None
DISCIPLINE: Psychology
HTTP: http://www.springerlink.com/content/l87572r38n317427/fulltext.pdf
LANGUAGE: English
PUB ID: 103-429-325 (Last edited on 2006/08/15 03:07:34 GMT-6)
SPONSOR(S):
 
ABSTRACT:
This is the third part of a series. Part I: Theories and Concepts appeared in Volume 3, Number 3 and Part II: The Face appeared in Volume 6, Number 4. In this part of the series a survey of the different techniques for the analysis of human movement behavior, as well as results of research and theorizing on gait, gestures, and body movement behavior is presented. It is demonstrated that Expression Psychology research of movement behavior is especially important for today's researcher because of the methods developed, while results are often anecdotal or dubious. The mode, the manner in which a voluntary movement is executed, is not a thing so exactly determined by the intention which is proposed by it that it cannot be executed in several different ways. That which the will or intention leaves undetermined can be sympathetically determined by the state of sensibility in which the person is found to be, and consequently can express this state.
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