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Galteeth said:Well, if you want a non-scientific, completely made up explanation of body language, there's always NLP. I met this British dude in a bar who claimed to be a NLP expert. He was going to demonstrate his skill to me by picking up some women. He was pretty drunk, and the results were hillarious. At one point he jumped in the air and spun around. It didn't work.
Basic body language isn't that hard to read. Rolling your eyes does generally mean exasperation, someone turning their back to you means they don't want to talk to you, etc.
I think the difficulty that a large study of body language would run into is that language is not universally expressed. Even in places where the same language is spoken, there can be so much subtle difference between how individual people use language. While a study might uncover some generalities, it is probably more useful to get an intuitive feel for how people use body language for the purposes you are describing.
Although some body language differs culture to culture (many gestures, etc), many of the facial expressions are supposed to be universal. One thing I found interesting is even people born blind have universal facial expressions, even if different intensities.
Here's something I found interesting that you may want to check out on the Universality of Facial Expressions, by the American Psychological Association.
http://www.apa.org/journals/releases/psp9611.pdf
It compared the athletes born blind in the 2004 Paralympic Games with those without impaired vision in the 2004 Olympic Games. It was interesting how there are universal facial expressions out there, regardless of culture and if you were blind at birth.
They've also given facial expressions tests to tribes living away from civilization, in the middle of now where, and found a lot of universality. According to the research, many of the facial expressions are supposed to be universal; however the “intensity” and “context for where it's socially appropriate” can differ (for example, east Asians versus U.S. versus Latin American countries). Interestingly, chimpanzees have similar facial expressions that humans have, even if there are some differences.
So with that in mind about some types of body language, one thing I'm wondering about is reference 3 that I listed in the original post:
“Reference that many women flirting signals are universal across the world, even if with different variations:
3. Cook, Mark and Robert McHenry, 1978. Sexual Attraction. New York Pergamon Press”
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