Correlation between Prosodic and Nonverbal Means of Communication in Political Discourse (gender study)

封面

如何引用文章

详细

The article examines the role of the gender factor in the correlation between prosodic means and accentuating gestures in political discourse. The results of the study reveal the gendered nature of the interconnection. Men-politicians use nonverbal means to accentuate words more often than women. Correlation between gestures and such prosodic models as “fundamental frequency + intensity” and “fundamental frequency + intensity + duration” is common for both male and female politicians.

作者简介

Nadezhda Tsibulya

Moscow State Linguistic University

编辑信件的主要联系方式.
Email: cybnb@mail.ru

PhD (Philology), Associate Professor, Associate Professor at the Department of English Phonetics Faculty of the English Language Moscow State Linguistic University, Professor Emeritus of Moscow State Linguistic University

俄罗斯联邦

Tatiana Iakovleva

Moscow State Linguistic University, Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration

Email: tb2710@mail.ru

Postgraduate student of the Department of English Phonetics Faculty of the English Language Moscow State Linguistic University, Lecturer at the Department of Foreign Languages Russian Academy of National Economy and Public Administration

俄罗斯联邦

参考

  1. Krejdlin, G. E. (2005). Muzhchiny i zhenshchiny v neverbal’noj kommunikacii = Men and women in non-verbal communication. Moscow: LRC Publishing House. (In Russ.)
  2. Wainwright, G. R. (1985). Body language. London: Hodder Education.
  3. Everitt, J., Best, L. A., Gaudet, D. (2016). Candidate Gender, Behavioral Style, and Willingness to Vote: Support for Female Candidates Depends on Conformity to Gender Norms. American Behavioral Scientist, 60(14), 1737–1755.
  4. Grebelsky-Lichtman, T., Katz, R. (2020). Gender Effect on Political Leaders’ Nonverbal Communicative Structure during the COVID-19 Crisis. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(7789), 1–14.
  5. Koppensteiner, M., Grammer, K. (2011). Body Movements of Male and Female Speakers and Their Influence on Perceptions of Personality. Personality and Individual Differences, 51, 743–747.
  6. Hall, J. A. (1978). Gender Effects in Decoding Nonverbal Cues. Psychological Bulletin, 85(4), 845–857.
  7. Mead, M. (1949). Male and Female: a Study of the Sexes in the Changing World. New York: W. Morrow.
  8. Gendelev, I. D. (2023). Correlation between Prosodic Means and Accentuating Gestures in Cross-cultural Discourse (gender study). Vestnik of Moscow State Linguistic University. Humanities, 6(874), 49–55. (In Russ.)
  9. Petrova, R. G. (2023). Genderologiya i feminologiya. 7th edition. Мoscow: Urait. (In Russ.)
  10. Tsibulya, N. B. (2020). Oblasti issledovaniya neverbal’nyh sredstv obshcheniya = Research on nonverbal means of communication: monograph. Мoscow: Gnosis. (In Russ.)

补充文件

附件文件
动作
1. JATS XML


Creative Commons License
此作品已接受知识共享署名 4.0国际许可协议的许可

Согласие на обработку персональных данных

 

Используя сайт https://journals.rcsi.science, я (далее – «Пользователь» или «Субъект персональных данных») даю согласие на обработку персональных данных на этом сайте (текст Согласия) и на обработку персональных данных с помощью сервиса «Яндекс.Метрика» (текст Согласия).