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  • Okay, I'm going to say something using only body language.

  • Did you get that?

  • Hi all you body linguists Trace here for DNews. Scientists weren't around to ask, but they

  • believe verbal language evolved as a learning aid for ancient human-like ancestors. Language

  • helped us communicate, coordinate and cognate (yes! alliteration!).

  • what is body language Before we'd evolved to say, "I'm hungry,"

  • or "I like you," nature devised other ways to say those things: Nonverbal communication!

  • Even when not speaking we're sending messages about our emotions, health, age, and social

  • status! The way you're standing, your hand gestures, body tension, facial expressions

  • all these communicate your inner feelings to the outside world, often without you realizing

  • it, and some of them are universal. who decided that's what nonverbals meant?

  • Charles Darwin first proposed the idea of universal body languages based on how our

  • muscles connected to our facial skin. 100 years later, a series of experiments by researchers

  • Tomkins and Ekman, found seven universal facial expressions: Happy, Surprise, Contempt, Fear,

  • Sadness, Disgust, and Anger. In essence, Darwin was right! We all have inherent structures

  • and adaptations in our brain's limbic system to process emotions -- and some are universally

  • expressed!

  • The amygdalae, which control reactions, self-preservation and emotional processing do all this work

  • for us, subconsciously. When people shout, "Surprise!" at a party, these almond-shaped

  • structures deep in the brain get that message first! First the amygdalae make sure these

  • people aren't about to attack, showing a universal fight-or-flight fear-evoked freeze response

  • while you process the emotion! Then after they're like, NO THREAT YOU'RE GOOD, you go

  • on to feel happiness and amusement. This happens all the time. When someone startles you, you

  • trip, or if your partner unexpectedly pops the question, you'll probably look scared

  • before you look happythanks amygdalae. Awkward.

  • so what body languages are universal? We are constantly shouting emotions with our

  • postures, gestures, and body shifts too. Yes, the fear-evoked freeze is universal, but so

  • are some others. A 2008 study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found

  • sighted, blind, and congenitally blind people from more than 30 nations all expressed shame

  • or pride in the same way, and a 2010 study also in PNAS added laughter to the list as

  • well! In yet another study, researchers found intense emotions don't even need a facial

  • expression: we can guess just from body language! what about body expressions

  • Even though body language is super important, face+body are better together says study after

  • study. According to 2013 research in the journal Science, when people were just shown faces

  • of people (even displaying "universal facial expressions,") they only had a 50-50 chance

  • of guessing the emotion, and by adding body language to the picture guesses became quote

  • "far more accurate."

  • Interestingly, some body language we think of as universal is not at all. Winks can mean

  • trust and friendship, or deviousness and concealment; the context matters. Additionally, body language

  • is intensely cultural. For example, in Russia, West Africa, the Middle East, parts of the

  • Mediterranean and Australia there's a gesture which means up-yours, but in the U.S., it

  • means LIKE! Or, in the West, close friends stand close together, and strangers further

  • apart, but a Middle Eastern salesman might stand closer to show trust. In the U.K. business

  • world, looking someone directly in the eye is considered rude but in the U.S. not meeting

  • a gaze is untrustworthy! In the end, more research, it be needed.

  • how do we control nonverbals? Even though they're subconscious, simply knowing

  • nonverbal cues exist can help you understand that secret language. According to Paul Ekman,

  • "Learning to recognize facial expressions of emotion in others helps you learn to recognize

  • your own emotions… [and this can] help you manage the expression of your own emotions."

  • And just remember, if you pop the question and your partner looks scared, that's just

  • their amygdalaeHopefully.

  • If you still aren't sure how to express your emotions, there are other culturally appropriate

  • expressions some people engage in. See what i did there? Engage in? This video was proudly

  • sponsored by Kay Jewelers, who might have some ideas on how to help. Every kiss begins

  • with Kay.

  • Nonverbal might be the most important part of language, but it's not the only way we

  • communicate with each other. On my other show TestTube Plus we spent a whole week researching

  • human communication, how it shapes your brain, how emoji might be the future of language,

  • and how klingon could be a REAL language. Check it out here.

  • Are you good at reading nonverbal cues? Are you going to look for them now? Bonus fact,

  • the harder you look, the worse you get at discerning the emotion, just let it happen

  • naturally. Tell me your thoughts in the comments.

Okay, I'm going to say something using only body language.

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肢體語言能透露出別人何時喜歡你嗎? (Can Body Language Reveal When Someone Likes You?)

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    陳叔華 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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