Behaviors
The Four Functions of Gazing.
What is Reglatory, Monitoring, Cognitive, and Expressive.
A visual picture of a person's speech.
What is the Spectrogram.
As acceptable: What is a voice print.
A gesture that is emblematic of honesty.
What is Putting your hand on/over your heart.
Syntactic facial displays act as ___.
What are Markers.
Those features of a social encounter that provide key markers for the meaning of any given behavior.
What is Context.
'Normal Blinking' occurs how many times per minute in adults?
What is 6 to 10 times per minute.
The physical mechanisms for producing nonverbal vocal qualities and sounds.
What is Paralanguage.
The gesture of nodding your head usually encodes what kind of information??
What is Positive Information.
The tendency to give more weight to the face than to other communication channels.
What is Facial Primacy.
The average American watches approximately how many hours of television per week?
What is 30 hours per week.
That adds up to 10 years by the age of 65!
Like touch, What can sometimes serve more to intensify or highlight whatever feeling or intention is present in the moment?
What is Gaze.
Speech cue(s) that are linked to a Manic Episode.
What is Pressured Speech.
The emotions we associate physical warmth in the chest with.
What is Longing, Love, Gratitude, or Closeness
A style of facial expression where there is a limited number of expressions that the person thought were masked.
What is The Unwitting Expressor.
People appear to have a ___-_ __ against recognizing what influences them.
What is Built-in Bias.
Dilation occurs under which conditions.
What is Conditions that seem to represent positive attitudes.
The Components most closely tied to speech?
What is Frequency, Speed, and Intensity.
Individuals' thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are influenced by what.
What is Body Movements.
Hand configuration, gestures, arm movements, or hand movements
The theory that asserts that facial expressions are virtually never simply emotional.
What is The Behavioral Ecology Theory [of Facial Expression].
In advertising aimed at children, how are boys portrayed?
What are Dominant, Aggressive, Effective, Victorious, and More likely to Manipulate Objects.
(Any of these answers will be counted as correct)
Who ushered in a new way of thinking about pupil dilation and constriction in the early 1960s.
Who is Eckhard Hess and his colleagues.
The Primary dimension that is described as Blue or White collar.
What is Sociointellectual Status.
The Maternal Care Reflux associated with empathetic concern.
What is Kama Muta.
Or
What is the feeling of warmth in the chest.
The hypothesis that states the expressions on the face can intensify emotional experience via direct connections between facial muscles and emotion centers in the brain.
What is The Facial Feedback Hypothesis.
Who said that "Nonverbal behavior can be fully understood only when considered within its special context" in 1999?
Who are P. Philippot, R.S. Feldman, and E.J. Coats.
(Any of these answers will be counted as correct)