English, asked by abawa6449, 10 months ago

Discuss the role of body language in communication. 5​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Explanation:

Public Speaking

Hence, it's highly important to have proper body movements and posture while speaking on stage in front of an audience. Body language is very important in all forms of communication. It helps to break the barrier of unfamiliarity and helps to form a better connect with the recipient of information.

Answered by yami32
8

Answer:

Body language is used in nearly every aspect of daily life, and observing someone can sometimes tell you a lot about how a person is feeling and what is on his or her mind. For example, in poker, people try to limit their body language for this exact reason. Without saying anything, body language can often get a person's point across, and this article will discuss how body language became a necessary part of our communication pallet and why it continues to be that way.

Body language is a form of non-verbal communication, which includes multiple actions and mannerisms, such as:

Facial Expressions

Gestures

Posture

Head Movement

Eye Contact

All of these are universal to all humans, and people can perform them consciously or subconsciously to convey their thoughts and feelings towards countless things. In fact, body language is believed to constitute about half of what we are trying to communicate.

However, this can depend greatly on context; for example, a person does not always need to verbally say "no" to communicate that something is wrong or that they disagree with what a person is saying. Instead, he or she can shake their head from side to side, to communicate the same thing.

Nonetheless, we all use various forms of body language in communication every single day, which is then interpreted by others. If a student is slouching in his or her chair in class and is making indirect eye contact, this will signal to the instructor that they are bored.

It can also be used to enhance our verbal communication skills, and they often complement each other very well. For instance, if someone is asking for directions in a store on where to find a product and an employee merely says "over there," this information is not entirely helpful to the customer because it is too vague.

At that point, the employee can be more specific with the location of the item by stating what aisle or department it is in; however, more often than not they will also gesture and point in the direction the person should be headed in.

Even if the employee was not very specific, and they said "over there" while also pointing, it still would be more helpful than the original scenario with no body language at all.

You may not have realized it until now, but body language plays a major role in your everyday interactions, which is why it is one of the most popular topics within communication studies, and it has been of interest for thousands of years - even the Ancient Greeks have put meaning by human physical behavior. [1]

Body Language As A Form Unconscious Communication

The previous section discussed a couple of examples that show how movement can be used to enhance speech; however, body language psychology also considers unconscious communication as well, because although it can be unintentional, it can still be interpreted by others.

Take law enforcement as an example - a forensic psychologist or someone working with intelligence is trained to notice microexpressions - which are quick full-faced expressions of emotions which are brief because they are unconscious.

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