CUT-OFF
Usage: In a conversation, a sudden cut-off gesture may indicate uncertainty or disagreement with a speaker's remarks. Sustained cut-off may reveal shyness or disliking.
Salesmanship. One signal of a prospect's skepticism: "Looking suddenly up and to the side" (Delmar 1984:46).
RESEARCH REPORTS: 1.
Facing away is a reaction to spatial invasion (Sommer 1969).
2. "After the host and the various guests embraced, they backed
off and one or both always looked away. [Adam] Kendon calls this the cut-off and
thinks it may be an equilibrium-maintaining device [to re-establish a proper
level of intimacy]" (Davis 1971:46). 3. ". . . we have
repeatedly seen in normal 3- to 4-month-old infants extreme head aversion
function to terminate intrusive maternal behavior" (Stern 1974:188-89).
4. "In all cases [in the presence of strange adults] boys turn
their heads away to the side more than do girls" (Stern and Bender 1974:241).
5. Gaze aversion "increased dramatically" in
conditions of crowding (Baxter and Rozelle 1975:46).
Copyright 1998 - 2010 (David B. Givens/Center for Nonverbal
Studies)
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