person‚ while territory refers to the area which a person may "lay claim to" and defend against others Personal Space- Body spacing and posture‚ are unintentional reactions to sensory fluctuations or shifts‚ such as subtle changes in the sound and pitch of a person’s voice. Social distance between people is reliably correlated with physical distance‚ as are intimate and personal distance‚ Hall did not mean for these measurements to be strict guidelines that translate precisely to human behavior‚ but
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language. Most common and amazing results are as followings: * During communication only 7% of the information human transmits to others is in the language you use. * 38% how people speak - quality of voice‚ accent‚ voice projection‚ emphasis‚ expression‚ pace‚ volume‚ pitch etc. * 55% Body language - posture‚ position‚ eye contact‚ facial expression‚ head and body movements‚ gestures‚ touch etc. Importance of using confident body language in career growth: 1999 a survey was
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Survival and Immaturity Mother bears leave their cubs after only 7 months after birth; humans however take eighteen years to let their children be free. This might be because the human brain takes twenty-five years to fully develop‚ making people under this age more likely to have a lesser understanding of how the world works. In William Golding’s novel Lord of the Flies‚ he shows that what can be perceived as natural evil is just an act of survival caused by immaturity. The perception of evil has
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Biological and Physical Anthropology Language evolution as part of human evolution Language and brain: studies of neurolinguistics and perception and how language is changed through strokes Medical studies of how diseases are categorized and treated Archaeology “glottochronology” and “lexicostatistics”: how languages are related based on their shared vocabulary linguistic archaeology: how particular languages change over time‚ such as North American Indian Languages The archaeology of symbolic
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Selective Attention In the world we live in‚ we are bombarded by infinite sensory inputs. The hum of the heater; the ticking on the clock; the chatter of your friends. Yet‚ this information usually goes unnoticed. Our brain has limited space to process and retain information and is not capable of processing everything we hear or see around us. In order to prevent a mental breakdown‚ we filter out the information we want and ignore the rest‚ referring to selective attention. Selective attention
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SHC 31 Promoting communication in health and social care Outcome 1.1 People can communicate for many various reasons. This can be to voice their opinions‚ to get attention‚ if they are in pain or when they want to get their emotions across. It can also to share ideas and information. Communication can also be done to build relationships‚ ask questions and share experiences. People communicate so that they can establish and maintain relationships with others and to give and receive information and
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Phonology is the study of how sound system is organized and used in a natural language. The sounds are organized into distinctive units called phonemes‚ then the phonemes are combined into syllables‚ and finally the features of length‚ stress and pitch are organised into patterns. Phonology also scrutinizes the sound patterns of a particular language by determining which phonetic sounds are significant and explaining how these sounds are interpreted by the native speaker. Below are examples of
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of English / N. Chomsky. M. Halle-N. Y.‚ 1968. - 267p. Crystal D. Prosodic Systems and Intonation in English/D. Crystal. - Cambridge‚ 1969. - 503p. Crystal D. Investigating English Style. /D. Crysral‚ D. Davy. - L.‚ 1973. - 402p. Hughes A. English Accents and Dialects. An Introduction to Social and Regional Varieties of British English. /A. Hughes‚P. Trudgill. - L.‚ 1979. - 382p. Lass R. Phonology. An Introduction to Basic Concepts/R. Lass. - Cambridge‚ 1995. - 374p. Roach P. English Phonetics and
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Bullock listed through Rose. By doing this action and speaking in the way I do‚ I will show the naivety of Rose’s character. When I say ‘I told the captain how finely he played upon the tabor and pipe…’ I would walk back towards Bullock and raise the pitch of my voice to show that I am showing off. After Silvia comes in and begins to talk to Rose‚ I would change to my flirtatious tone of voice and slow the pace down as I talk in order to seem more seductive. I would prolong the words ‘No‚ No’ and exaggerate
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Communication Barriers Communication Barriers are the various obstacles and hurdles which arise in between of an effective communication leading to misunderstandings and misinterpretations by the receiver. In the above example noise was the communication barrier. Role of communication barriers in ineffective communication Let us now understand in details what the barriers to an effective communication are and how they lead to an ineffective communication. * Noise - Noise plays an important
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