Using traditional literature in nonverbal communication to examine online cues

With the rise of the internet, researchers have begun to examine how this new medium is used and how it changes our lives. There has been particular interest (as well as concern), both in academic circles and in popular culture and media, in the linguistic forms found online, such as emoticons and s...

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Main Author: Myers, Tiffany Marie
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/19159
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-191592015-09-20T17:12:48ZUsing traditional literature in nonverbal communication to examine online cuesMyers, Tiffany MarieNonverbal communicationEmoticonsInternet slangWith the rise of the internet, researchers have begun to examine how this new medium is used and how it changes our lives. There has been particular interest (as well as concern), both in academic circles and in popular culture and media, in the linguistic forms found online, such as emoticons and specialized abbreviations (e.g. 'LOL' for 'laughing out loud'). However, while there are many studies to be found on emoticons, these well-known forms are only a very small subset of the wide variety of specialized forms found online, and studies examining other types of online forms are few and far between. Many of these forms, like emoticons, can convey facial expressions, but they can also communicate sounds and other actions, forms of expression that, in face-to-face interactions, are usually the domain of studies in nonverbal communication. Because of the correlation between these two areas, I suggest that the vast store of literature on traditional nonverbal communication can help us to understand online correlates of nonverbal behavior by providing a starting point for future studies into the intricacies of online forms.text2013-01-17T21:10:58Z2013-01-17T21:10:58Z2008-082013-01-17electronichttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/19159engCopyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Nonverbal communication
Emoticons
Internet slang
spellingShingle Nonverbal communication
Emoticons
Internet slang
Myers, Tiffany Marie
Using traditional literature in nonverbal communication to examine online cues
description With the rise of the internet, researchers have begun to examine how this new medium is used and how it changes our lives. There has been particular interest (as well as concern), both in academic circles and in popular culture and media, in the linguistic forms found online, such as emoticons and specialized abbreviations (e.g. 'LOL' for 'laughing out loud'). However, while there are many studies to be found on emoticons, these well-known forms are only a very small subset of the wide variety of specialized forms found online, and studies examining other types of online forms are few and far between. Many of these forms, like emoticons, can convey facial expressions, but they can also communicate sounds and other actions, forms of expression that, in face-to-face interactions, are usually the domain of studies in nonverbal communication. Because of the correlation between these two areas, I suggest that the vast store of literature on traditional nonverbal communication can help us to understand online correlates of nonverbal behavior by providing a starting point for future studies into the intricacies of online forms. === text
author Myers, Tiffany Marie
author_facet Myers, Tiffany Marie
author_sort Myers, Tiffany Marie
title Using traditional literature in nonverbal communication to examine online cues
title_short Using traditional literature in nonverbal communication to examine online cues
title_full Using traditional literature in nonverbal communication to examine online cues
title_fullStr Using traditional literature in nonverbal communication to examine online cues
title_full_unstemmed Using traditional literature in nonverbal communication to examine online cues
title_sort using traditional literature in nonverbal communication to examine online cues
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/19159
work_keys_str_mv AT myerstiffanymarie usingtraditionalliteratureinnonverbalcommunicationtoexamineonlinecues
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