Studies in Dyadic Communication 1972
DOI: 10.1016/b978-0-08-015867-9.50012-5
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The Analysis of Movement Behavior During the Clinical Interview

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Cited by 120 publications
(91 citation statements)
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“…In other words, the cephalo-caudal progress of communication is inhibited in depression and disinhibited in mania. This formulation is consistent with the finding of decreased object focused movements indicative of reduced communicatory intent in depression (Freedman, 1972) and with increased sociability and over-familiarity seen in manic states.…”
Section: Application Of the Model: Psychopathologysupporting
confidence: 88%
“…In other words, the cephalo-caudal progress of communication is inhibited in depression and disinhibited in mania. This formulation is consistent with the finding of decreased object focused movements indicative of reduced communicatory intent in depression (Freedman, 1972) and with increased sociability and over-familiarity seen in manic states.…”
Section: Application Of the Model: Psychopathologysupporting
confidence: 88%
“…This is not a new idea and has been suggested by a remarkably diverse group of scholars over the last 75 years (DeLaguna, 1927;Freedman, 1972;Mead, 1934;Moscovici, 1967;Werner & Kaplan, 1963). Empirical support for the notion that gesturing affects lexical access is mixed.…”
Section: Lexical Retrievalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such gestures also bear no direct relation to speech; it has been suggested that their occurrence is related to either motivational state or the attentional demands of the speech production process. Freedman's (1972) object-focused and body-focused gestures are analogous to Ekman and Friesen's illustrators and selfadaptors, respectively; as such, object-focused gestures exhibit a direct relation to the conceptual content of the message. McNeill's (1981) "iconic" gestures are like the just-mentioned object-focused ones in that they are concrete depictions of the meanings expressed in the concurrent speech.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%