E-Book, Englisch, Band 38/1, 1146 Seiten, Inkl. DVD
An International Handbook on Multimodality in Human Interaction. Volume 1
E-Book, Englisch, Band 38/1, 1146 Seiten, Inkl. DVD
ISBN: 978-3-11-026131-8
Verlag: De Gruyter
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
Zielgruppe
Practitioners in Visual Arts and Communication, Rhetorics, Speech Pathology, Dance, Design of Virtual Agents
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
1;Introduction;9
2;I. How the body relates to language and communication: Outlining the subject matter;15
2.1;1. Exploring the utterance roles of visible bodily action: A personal account;15
2.2;2. Gesture as a window onto mind and brain, and the relationship to linguistic relativity and ontogenesis;36
2.3;3. Gestures and speech from a linguistic perspective: A new field and its history;63
2.4;4. Emblems, quotable gestures, or conventionalized body movements;90
2.5;5. Framing, grounding, and coordinating conversational interaction: Posture, gaze, facial expression, and movement in space;108
2.6;6. Homesign: When gesture is called upon to be language;121
2.7;7. Speech, sign, and gesture;133
3;II. Perspectives from different disciplines;143
3.1;8. The growth point hypothesis of language and gesture as a dynamic and integrated system;143
3.2;9. Psycholinguistics of speech and gesture: Production, comprehension, architecture;164
3.3;10. Neuropsychology of gesture production;176
3.4;11. Cognitive Linguistics: Spoken language and gesture as expressions of conceptualization;190
3.5;12. Gestures as a medium of expression: The linguistic potential of gestures;210
3.6;13. Conversation analysis: Talk and bodily resources for the organization of social interaction;226
3.7;14. Ethnography: Body, communication, and cultural practices;235
3.8;15. Cognitive Anthropology: Distributed cognition and gesture;248
3.9;16. Social psychology: Body and language in social interaction;266
3.10;17. Multimodal (inter)action analysis: An integrative methodology;283
3.11;18. Body gestures, manners, and postures in literature;295
4;III. Historical dimensions;309
4.1;19. Prehistoric gestures: Evidence from artifacts and rock art;309
4.2;20. Indian traditions: A grammar of gestures in classical dance and dance theatre;314
4.3;21. Jewish traditions: Active gestural practices in religious life;328
4.4;22. The body in rhetorical delivery and in theater: An overview of classical works;337
4.5;23. Medieval perspectives in Europe: Oral culture and bodily practices;351
4.6;24. Renaissance philosophy: Gesture as universal language;372
4.7;25. Enlightenment philosophy: Gestures, language, and the origin of human understanding;386
4.8;26. 20th century: Empirical research of body, language, and communication;401
4.9;27. Language – gesture – code: Patterns of movement in artistic dance from the Baroque until today;424
4.10;28. Communicating with dance: A historiography of aesthetic and anthropological reflections on the relation between dance, language, and representation;435
4.11;29. Mimesis: The history of a notion;446
5;IV. Contemporary approaches;459
5.1;30. Mirror systems and the neurocognitive substrates of bodily communication and language;459
5.2;31. Gesture as precursor to speech in evolution;474
5.3;32. The co-evolution of gesture and speech, and downstream consequences;488
5.4;33. Sensorimotor simulation in speaking, gesturing, and understanding;520
5.5;34. Levels of embodiment and communication;541
5.6;35. Body and speech as expression of inner states;559
5.7;36. Fused Bodies: On the interrelatedness of cognition and interaction;572
5.8;37. Multimodal interaction;585
5.9;38. Verbal, vocal, and visual practices in conversational interaction;597
5.10;39. The codes and functions of nonverbal communication;617
5.11;40. Mind, hands, face, and body: A sketch of a goal and belief view of multimodal communication;635
5.12;41. Nonverbal communication in a functional pragmatic perspective;656
5.13;42. Elements of meaning in gesture: The analogical links;666
5.14;43. Praxeology of gesture;682
5.15;44. A “Composite Utterances” approach to meaning;697
5.16;45. Towards a grammar of gestures: A form-based view;715
5.17;46. Towards a unified grammar of gesture and speech: A multimodal approach;741
5.18;47. The exbodied mind: Cognitive-semiotic principles as motivating forces in gesture;763
5.19;48. Articulation as gesture: Gesture and the nature of language;793
5.20;49. How our gestures help us learn;800
5.21;50. Coverbal gestures: Between communication and speech production;812
5.22;51. The social interactive nature of gestures: Theory, assumptions, methods, and findings;829
6;V. Methods;845
6.1;52. Experimental methods in co-speech gesture research;845
6.2;53. Documentation of gestures with motion capture;865
6.3;54. Documentation of gestures with data gloves;876
6.4;55. Reliability and validity of coding systems for bodily forms of communication;887
6.5;56. Sequential notation and analysis for bodily forms of communication;900
6.6;57. Decoding bodily forms of communication;912
6.7;58. Analysing facial expression using the facial action coding system (FACS);925
6.8;59. Coding psychopathology in movement behavior: The movement psychodiagnostic inventory;940
6.9;60. Laban based analysis and notation of body movement;949
6.10;61. Kestenberg movement analysis;966
6.11;62. Doing fieldwork on the body, language, and communication;982
6.12;63. Video as a tool in the social sciences;990
6.13;64. Approaching notation, coding, and analysis from a conversational analysis point of view;1000
6.14;65. Transcribing gesture with speech;1015
6.15;66. Multimodal annotation tools;1023
6.16;67. NEUROGES – A coding system for the empirical analysis of hand movement behaviour as a reflection of cognitive, emotional, and interactive processes;1030
6.17;68. Transcription systems for gestures, speech, prosody, postures, and gaze;1045
6.18;69. A linguistic perspective on the notation of gesture phases;1068
6.19;70. A linguistic perspective on the notation of form features in gestures;1087
6.20;71. Linguistic Annotation System for Gestures (LASG);1106
6.21;72. Transcription systems for sign languages: A sketch of the different graphical representations of sign language and their characteristics;1133