Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Proxemics (Hall 1966), the study of distance and space, has become a special field of body culture studies.
The term territoriality is used in the study of proxemics to explain human behavior regarding personal space.
While people may crave space, they rarely realize how entrenched proxemics are.
Communications scholars began studying personal space and people's perception of it decades ago, in a field known as proxemics.
These have some relationship to Proxemics.
It has also been used in a slightly different sense by students of Edward Hall's studies in proxemics, more generally called "personal space."
Edward T. Hall, an anthropologist and the father of proxemics, even put numbers to the unspoken rules.
Gestures, postures, haptics, clothing, eye contact and proxemics all can be understood differently across the world.
The other consideration is camera proxemics, which answers the single question: How far away is the camera from the characters/action?
One must not stay with a ghayr mahram in seclusion where none of their mahrams is present (see also proxemics).
A significant focus of expectancy violations theory is the concept of proxemics, or the study of individual use of personal space.
The notion of personal space was introduced in 1966 by anthropologist Edward T. Hall, who created the concept of proxemics.
Within this view, sounds, facial expressions, body language, and proxemics have semantic (meaningful) content, and each comprises several branches of study.
Burgoon defined Proxemics as the study of people's use of space as a special elaboration of culture.
He is remembered for developing the concept of Proxemics, a description of how people behave and react in different types of culturally defined personal space.
Throughout his career, Hall introduced a number of new concepts, including proxemics, polychronic and monochronic time, and high and low context culture.
It is really about theatrical proxemics; about the show-within-a-show and the spontaneous, visceral reactions of people being astonished."
Whereas much of Burgoon's work emphasizes nonverbal violations of physical spacethis known as the study of proxemics.
The next step of the Nonverbal Expectancy Violation model deals with the idea of proxemics and kinesics.
In his work on proxemics, Edward T. Hall separated his theory into two overarching categories: personal space and territory.
However, the identification and recognition of posture, gait, proxemics, and human behaviors is also the subject of gesture recognition techniques.
With this theory, Burgoon also builds upon anthropologist Edward T. Hall's previous work on proxemics and personal space.
The term 'proxemics' was introduced by anthropologist Edward T. Hall in 1966 which is the study of set measurable distances between people as they interact.
Heini Hediger (1908-1992) was a Swiss biologist noted for work in proxemics in animal behavior and is known as the "father of zoo biology".
Gestures differ from physical non-verbal communication that does not communicate specific messages, such as purely expressive displays, proxemics, or displays of joint attention.