Browsing by Subject "Nonverbal Communication"
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Item Open Access Developmental and Evolutionary Origins of Language: Insights from the Study of Pointing and Gaze in Infants, Bonobos, and Chimpanzees(2017) Lucca, Kelsey RileyThe uniquely human ability to acquire language has led to two important and enduring questions: how did humans evolve the ability to communicate through language, and how do human infants acquire this ability so adeptly? Here, I aim to provide new insights into these long-standing questions by exploring how human infants and nonhuman primates use and develop nonverbal communicative behaviors.
Chapter 1 introduces the significance of the empirical studies by outlining the role of nonverbal behaviors in shaping uniquely human communicative skills, along both evolutionary and developmental timelines. In Chapter 2, I take a developmental approach and investigate the role of one particularly important nonverbal behavior, infants’ pointing gestures, in facilitating early language development. I found that pointing has a direct and immediate impact on word learning: in the moment an infant points toward an object, they have a heightened readiness to learn that object’s label. In Chapter 3, I test how pointing relates to learning in a variety of domains, and explores potential motives driving infants’ production of pointing. Results demonstrated that pointing reflects a heightened readiness to learn both labels and functions, and are potentially motivated by requests for objects’ labels. In Chapter 4, I take an evolutionary approach and describe a study assessing another important form of nonverbal communication, gaze alternations, in bonobos and chimpanzees. Like humans, bonobos and chimpanzees gaze alternated more when interacting with an attentive, as opposed to inattentive, communicative partner. However, unlike humans, individuals produced few gaze alternations (bonobos) or only frequently gaze alternated after reaching adulthood (chimpanzees).
Chapter 5 provides an overview and synthesis of the empirical findings, as well as important future directions. Together, the studies presented here confirm that nonverbal behaviors are a critical feature of the communication systems of both nonhuman apes and human infants. By demonstrating how human infants and nonhuman apes use nonverbal behaviors to communicate and learn, the current findings provide unique insights into the origins and development of language.
Item Open Access Non-verbal communication between primary care physicians and older patients: how does race matter?(J Gen Intern Med, 2012-05) Stepanikova, Irena; Zhang, Qian; Wieland, Darryl; Eleazer, G Paul; Stewart, ThomasBACKGROUND: Non-verbal communication is an important aspect of the diagnostic and therapeutic process, especially with older patients. It is unknown how non-verbal communication varies with physician and patient race. OBJECTIVE: To examine the joint influence of physician race and patient race on non-verbal communication displayed by primary care physicians during medical interviews with patients 65 years or older. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Video-recordings of visits of 209 patients 65 years old or older to 30 primary care physicians at three clinics located in the Midwest and Southwest. MAIN MEASURES: Duration of physicians' open body position, eye contact, smile, and non-task touch, coded using an adaption of the Nonverbal Communication in Doctor-Elderly Patient Transactions form. KEY RESULTS: African American physicians with African American patients used more open body position, smile, and touch, compared to the average across other dyads (adjusted mean difference for open body position = 16.55, p < 0.001; smile = 2.35, p = 0.048; touch = 1.33, p < 0.001). African American physicians with white patients spent less time in open body position compared to the average across other dyads, but they also used more smile and eye gaze (adjusted mean difference for open body position = 27.25, p < 0.001; smile = 3.16, p = 0.005; eye gaze = 17.05, p < 0.001). There were no differences between white physicians' behavior toward African American vs. white patients. CONCLUSION: Race plays a role in physicians' non-verbal communication with older patients. Its influence is best understood when physician race and patient race are considered jointly.