The definitive book of body language /
| Main Author: | |
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| Other Authors: | |
| Format: | Book |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
New York :
Bantam Books,
2006.
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| Edition: | Bantam hardcover ed. |
| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | Contributor biographical information Publisher description Sample text |
Table of Contents:
- Introduction
- All things are not what they seem
- How well do you know the back of your hand?
- How well can you spot body-language contradictions?
- How we wrote this book
- Your body-language dictionary
- 1. Understanding the basics
- In the beginning ...
- Why it's not what you say
- How body language reveals emotions and thoughts
- Why women are more perceptive
- What brain scans show
- How fortune-tellers know so much
- Inborn, genetic, or learned culturally?
- Some basic origins
- Universal gestures
- Three rules for accurate reading
- Why it can be easy to misread
- Why kids are easier to read
- Can you fake it?
- True-life story : the lying job applicant
- How to become a great reader
- 2. The power is in your hands
- How to detect openness
- Intentional use of the palms to deceive
- The law of cause and effect
- Palm power
- Our audience experiment
- An analysis of handshake styles
- Who should reach first?
- How dominance and control are communicated
- The submissive handshake
- How to create equality-- How to create rapport
- How to disarm a power player
- The cold, clammy handshake
- Gaining the left-side advantage
- When men and women shake hands
- The double-hander
- Handshakes of control
- The Blair-Bush power game
- The solution
- The world's eight worst handshakes
- The Arafat-Rabin handshake
- Summary
- 3. The magic of smiles and laughter
- Smiling is a submission signal
- Why smiling is contagious
- How a smile tricks the brain
- Practicing the fake smile
- Smugglers smile less
- Five common types of smiles
- Why laughter is the best medicine
- Why you should take laughter seriously
- Why we laugh and talk, but chimps don't
- How humor heals
- Laughing till you cry
- How jokes work
- The laughter room
- Smiles and laughter are a way of bonding
- Humor sells
- The permanent down-mouth
- Smiling advice for women
- Laughter in love
- Summary
- 4. Arm signals
- Arm barrier signals
- Why crossed arms can be detrimental
- Yes ... but I'm just "comfortable"
- Gender differences
- Crossed-arms-on-chest
- The solution
- Reinforced arm-crossing
- Arm-gripping
- The boss vs. the staff
- Getting the thumbs-up
- Hugging yourself
- How the rich and famous reveal their insecurity
- The coffee cup barrier
- The power of touch
- Touch their hand, too
- Summary
- 5. Cultural differences
- We were having pizza at the time
- Take the cultural test
- Why we're all becoming American
- Cultural basics are the same almost everywhere
- Greeting differences
- When one culture encounters another
- The English stiff-upper-lip
- The Japanese
- "You dirty, disgusting pig!" : nose blowing
- The three most common cross-cultural gestures
- To touch or not to touch?
- How to offend other cultures
- Summary
- 6. Hand and thumb gestures
- How the hands talk
- On the one hand ...
- On the other hand, gestures improve recall
- Rubbing the palms together
- Thumb and finger rub
- Hands clenched together
- The steeple
- Using steepling to win at chess
- Summary
- The face platter
- Holding hands behind the back
- Thumb displays
- Thumbs-protruding-from-coat-pocket
- Summary
- 7. Evaluation and deceit signals
- Lying research
- The three wise monkeys
- How the face reveals the truth
- Women lie the best and that's he truth
- Why it's hard to lie
- Eight of the most common lying gestures
- Evaluation and procrastination gestures
- Boredom
- Evaluation gestures
- The lying interviewee
- Chin stroking
- Stalling clusters
- Head rubbing and slapping gestures
- Why Bob always lost at chess
- The double meaning
- 8. Eye signals
- The dilating pupils
- Take the pupil test
- Women are better at it, as usual
- Giving them the eye
- The eyebrow flash
- Eye widening
- The "looking up" cluster
- How men's fires get lit
- Gaze behavior, where do you look?
- How to keep eye contact in a nudist colony
- How to grab a man's attention
- Most liars look you in the eye
- How to avoid being attached or abused
- The sideways glance
- Extended blinking
- Darting eyes
- The geography of the face
- The politician's story
- Look deep into my eyes, baby
- The first twenty seconds of an interview
- The solution
- What channel are you tuned to?
- How to hold eye contact with an audience
- How to present visual information
- The power lift
- Summary
- 9. Space invaders, territories and personal space
- Personal space
- Zone distance
- Practical applications of zone distances
- Who is moving in on whom?
- Why we hate riding in elevators
- Why mobs become angry
- Spacing rituals
- Try the luncheon test
- Cultural factors affecting zone distances
- Why Japanese always lead when they waltz
- Country vs. city spatial zones
- Territory and ownership
- Car territory
- Take the test
- Summary
- 10. How the legs reveal what the mind wants to do
- Everybody's talking about a new way of walking
- How feet tell the truth
- The purpose of the legs
- The four main standing positions
- Defensive, cold, or "just comfortable"?
- How we move from closed to open
- The European leg cross
- The American figure four
- When the body closes, so does the mind
- Figure four leg clamp
- The ankle lock
- The short skirt syndrome
- The leg twine
- Parallel legs
- Put your right foot in, put your right foot out
- Summary
- 11. The thirteen most common gestures you'll see daily
- The head nod
- Why you should learn to nod
- How to encourage agreement
- The head shake
- The basic head positions
- The head duck
- Picking imaginary lint
- How we show we're ready for action
- The cowboy stance
- Sizing up the competition
- The legs-spread
- Leg-over-the-arm-of-chair
- Straddling a chair
- The catapult
- Gestures that show when a person is ready
- The starter's position
- Summary
- 12. Mirroring, how we build rapport
- Creating the right vibes
- Mirroring on a cellular level
- Mirroring differences between men and women
- What to do about it if you're female
- When men and women start to look alike
- Do we resemble our pets?
- Monkey see, monkey do
- Matching voices
- Intentionally creating rapport
- Who mirrors whom?
- Summary
- 13. The secret signals of cigarettes, glasses, and makeup
- The two types of smokers
- Differences between men and women
- Smoking as a sexual display
- How to sport a positive or negative decision
- Cigar smokers
- How smokers end a session
- How to rad glasses
- Stalling tactics
- Peering-over-the-glasses
- Wearing glasses on the head
- The power of glasses and makeup
- A little lippy, lady?
- Briefcase signals
- Summary
- 14. How the body points to where the mind wants to go
- What body angles say
- How we exclude others
- Seated body pointing
- Foot pointing
- Summary
- 15. Courtship displays and attraction signals
- The emergence of the colorful male
- Graham's story
- Why women always call the shots
- Differences between men and women
- The attraction process
- The thirteen most common female courtship gestures and signals
- What men look at in women's bodies
- How beautiful people miss out
- Is he a butt, boobs, or leg man?
- Male courtship signals and gestures
- Men's bodies, what turns women on the most
- Is she a chest, legs, or butt gal?
- Summary
- 16. Ownership, territory, and height signals
- Body lowering and status
- He's a big man around town
- Why some people seem taller on TV
- Try the floor test
- The downsides of height
- How body lowering can sometimes raise status
- How TV politicians can win votes
- How to placate angry people
- What's love got to do with it?
- Some strategies for gaining perceived height
- Summary
- 17. Seating arrangements, where to sit and why
- Take the table test
- It's not what you say, it's where you sit
- King Arthur's concept
- Keeping two people involved
- Rectangular board tables
- Why teacher's pet sits on the left
- Power plays at home
- How to make an audience cry
- The attention zone
- An experiment in learning
- Getting a decision over dinner
- Summary
- 18. Interviews, power plays, and office politics
- Why James Bond looked cool, calm, and collected
- The nine golden keys to making great first impressions
- When someone keeps you waiting
- Fake it till you make it?
- Seven simple strategies for giving you the extra edge
- Summary
- Office power politics
- How to switch table territories
- Seated body pointing
- How to rearrange an office
- Summary
- 19. Putting it all together
- How well can you rad between the lines?
- How did you rate?
- Summary
- The seven secrets of attractive body language.