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Culture and Psychology

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Title: Culture and Psychology


1
Culture and Psychology
  • Language and Communication

2
Language and Communication
  • Introduction
  • Functions of Nonverbal Communication
  • Types of Nonverbal Communication
  • Language Attitudes
  • Communication Accommodation Theory
  • Linguistic Relativity

3
What is Communication?
  • Communication is a process during which source
    individuals initiate messages using
    conventionalized symbols, nonverbal signs, and
    contextual cues to express meanings by
    transmitting information in such a way that
    similar or parallel understandings are
    constructed by the receiving pry or parties
    toward whom the messages are directed. (Defleur
    et al., 1992, p. 11)

4
What is Language?
  • Language is a sign and symbol system. It
    involves a set of rules regarding the linking of
    symbols to referents and their meanings and the
    linking of symbols to each other.

5
What is Language?
  • Language includes several subsystems
  • Phonological system
  • sounds
  • Morphological system
  • meaning units (e.g. words)
  • Syntactic system
  • grammar
  • Semantic system
  • meaning
  • Pragmatic system
  • use

6
What is Nonverbal Communication?
  • Nonverbal communication is defined as the way in
    which people communicate, intentionally or
    unintentionally, without words.

7
Nonverbal Communication
  • Functions of Nonverbal Communication (Ekman
    Friesen, 1969)
  • Repeat what is said verbally
  • Complement or clarify verbal meaning
  • Contradict verbal meaning
  • Regulate verbal interaction
  • Substitute for verbal meaning

8
Similarities and Differences in Verbal and
Nonverbal Codes (Burgoon, Buller, Woodall, 1996)
  • Discreteness
  • Syntax rules
  • Polysemy
  • Arbitrariness
  • Displacement
  • Reflexivity
  • Transformation
  • Productivity
  • Analogic coding
  • Iconicity
  • Universality vs. culture/context bound meaning
  • Simultaneity
  • Sensory directness
  • Spontaneity

9
Nonverbal Communication
  • Types of Nonverbal Communication
  • Facial Expression
  • Kinesics - body movement and gesture
  • Proxemics - use of interpersonal space
  • Oculesics - eye gaze
  • Haptics - touch
  • Chronemics - time
  • Paralinguistics - vocal cues and silence

10
Nonverbal Communication
  • Kinesics is the study of body movement and
    gestures
  • Illustrators -- nonverbal gestures directly
    linked to language
  • Emblems nonberbal substitutes for spoken
    language

11
Nonverbal Communication
  • Proxemics
  • Hall (1959, 1966) Zones of Spatial Distance
  • Intimate (18 inches)
  • Personal (18 inches to 4 feet)
  • Social (4 to 12 feet)
  • Public (12 to 15 feet)

12
Nonverbal Communication
  • Chronemics
  • Monchronic perspective time is a scarce
    resource, which must be rationed and controlled.
  • Polychronic perspective time is flexible, used
    for the maintenance of harmonious relationships.

13
Language Attitudes Definition of Attitudes
  • An attitude is a mental and neural state of
    readiness, organized through experience, exerting
    a directive or dynamic influence upon the
    individuals response to all objects and
    situations with which it is related. (G.W.
    Allport, 1935)

14
Attitudes and Language Variation
  • Persons have attitudes toward language which are
    especially salient and influential in initial
    interactions. Various linguistic features
    trigger in message recipients beliefs and
    evaluations regarding message senders and these
    beliefs and evaluations are most likely to affect
    recipients behaviours toward senders in contexts
    of low mutual familiarity (Bradac, 1990, p. 388)

15
Standard and Non-Standard Speech Styles
  • A standard speech style is the prestige form of a
    language, associated with the higher status group
    in a society.
  • A nonstandard form is any variant from the
    standard form (e.g., another language, dialect,
    accent), usually associated with the lower status
    group.

16
Hypotheses about Standard and Non-Standard Speech
Styles
  • Inherent value hypothesis
  • The standard dialect became the prestige form of
    the language because it evolved as the
    aesthetically ideal form of that language.
  • Imposed norm hypothesis
  • Standard and non-standard dialects are equally
    aesthetically pleasing, but the non-standard form
    is viewed negatively because of social norms
    which are biased against it.

17
Research Approaches
  • Content analyses
  • Survey research
  • Experimental research

18
Matched Guise Technique(Lambert, Hodgson,
Gardner, Fillenbaum 1960)
  • Independent Variable
  • 4 bilingual speakers read passage once in English
    and once in French 8 passages
  • Dependent Variable
  • Height, good looks, leadership, sense of humour,
    intelligence, religiousness, self-confidence,
    dependability, entertaining, kindness, ambitious,
    sociable, character, likeablity

19
Evaluative Dimensions
  • Ryan et al. (1977)
  • Status
  • Educated-uneducated, wealthy-poor,
    intelligent-unintelligent
  • Solidarity
  • Trustworthy-untrustworthy, friendly-unfriendly,
    kind-cruel
  • Zahn Hopper (1985)
  • Superiority
  • Literate-illiterate, educated-uneducated, upper
    class-lower class
  • Attractiveness
  • Nice-awful, kind-unkind, good natured-hostile
  • Dynamism
  • Active-passive, talkative-shy, enthusiastic-weak

20
Evaluative DimensionsStatus and Solidarity
Respondents from Lower Status Group
Respondents from Higher Status Group
21
Language Attitudes and Discrimination
  • Compliance
  • Workplace
  • Education
  • Law
  • Medicine

22
Language Attitudes and Discrimination in the
Workplace (de la Zerda Hopper, 1979)
Probability of Employment
23
Other Speech Characteristics
  • Lexical Diversity
  • Vocabulary range, assessed through a type-token
    ratio ( of new words to total words)
  • Evaluative reactions status, competence,
    control, persuasiveness
  • Speech Rate
  • The number of words or syllables that speakers
    utter per unit of time (per minute is the
    standard unit)
  • Evaluative reactions competence, persuasiveness

24
Other Speech Characteristics, continued
  • Language Intensity
  • The quality of language which indicates the
    degree to which a speakers attitude toward a
    concept deviates from neutrality (Bowers, 1963,
    p. 345)
  • Evaluative reactions complex, interacts with
    other variables.

25
Communication Accommodation Strategies
  • Convergence
  • Moderation of a speech style, whether in terms of
    lexical diversity, rate, accent, language, and/or
    some other linguistic feature, to become more
    similar to the interactant
  • Divergence
  • Accentuation of a difference between
    interlocutors on one or a number of linguistic
    features.
  • Maintenance
  • Refusal to alter communication style

26
Communication Accommodation Theory
  • Social Exchange Theory
  • Similarity-Attraction Hypothesis
  • Causal Attributions
  • Psychological Group Distinctiveness

27
Linguistic Relativity (Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis)
  • Linguistic Determinism
  • The structure of a language strongly influences
    or fully determines the way its native speakers
    perceive the world.
  • Linguistic Relativity
  • Structural differences between languages will
    generally be paralleled by non-linguistic
    cognitive differences in the native speakers of
    the two languages.

28
Linguistic Relativity, cont.
  • Languages differ not so much as to what can be
    said in them, but rather as to what is relatively
    easy to say (Hockett, 1954, p. 122, original
    emphases)

29
Linguistic Relativity, cont.
  • Language and perception
  • Language and memory
  • Language and reasoning
  • Language and social inference
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