2015
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-137-35145-6
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Work Communication

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Cited by 9 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Face-to-face encounters are regarded as the ‘gold standard’ (Guirdham, 2015: 12), not only in journalism (Fishman, 1980; Frank, 1999; Tait, 2011; Zelizer, 2007) but also in interpersonal communication, urban geography, sociology and pragmatics (Guirdham, 2015: 12; see also Boden and Molotch, 1994; Fidler, 1997; Giddens, 2010; Goffman, 1972; Hutchby, 2001; Hutchby and Barnett, 2005; Rogers, 1986; Urry, 2001). According to Guirdham (2015), physical presence offers most channels (including verbal behavior, paralinguistic behavior which includes voice, tone, pace, loudness, pauses, silence and alterations as well as non-verbal behavior called also body language including facial expression, posture, gesture, proxemics, kinesics and the alterations of all these over the duration of the interaction).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Face-to-face encounters are regarded as the ‘gold standard’ (Guirdham, 2015: 12), not only in journalism (Fishman, 1980; Frank, 1999; Tait, 2011; Zelizer, 2007) but also in interpersonal communication, urban geography, sociology and pragmatics (Guirdham, 2015: 12; see also Boden and Molotch, 1994; Fidler, 1997; Giddens, 2010; Goffman, 1972; Hutchby, 2001; Hutchby and Barnett, 2005; Rogers, 1986; Urry, 2001). According to Guirdham (2015), physical presence offers most channels (including verbal behavior, paralinguistic behavior which includes voice, tone, pace, loudness, pauses, silence and alterations as well as non-verbal behavior called also body language including facial expression, posture, gesture, proxemics, kinesics and the alterations of all these over the duration of the interaction).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Telephones were seen as the ultimate technology-mediated channel for human communication (Boden and Molotch, 2004; Fidler, 1997; Hutchby and Barnett, 2005), sharing more resemblance than difference with physical presence. They allow intimacy and ‘conversationality in a way that preserves all the personality, recognizability and inflections of the ordinary voice’, and the ‘paralinguistic’ attributes of voice, tone, speed of speech, non-verbal cues and ‘identifying markers’, such as the other party’s age, gender, ethnicity and social position (Boden and Molotch, 2004; Fidler, 1997; Giddens, 2010: 154; Guirdham, 2015; Hutchby, 2001; Hutchby and Barnett, 2005; Ong, 1982; Strentz, 1989).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%