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2.   Dan Vierra, “Straight Talk: Bush Praised for Posture if not Words,” The
                        Sacramento Bee, 25 January 2007, E1.
                     3.  George B. Ray, “Vocally Cued Personality Prototypes: An Implicit Person-
                        ality Theory Approach,” Communication Monographs 53 (1986): 266–76.
                     4.  Richard L. Street and Robert M. Brady, “Evaluative Responses to Commu-
                        nicators as a Function of Evaluative Domain, Listener Speech Rate,
                        and Communication Context,” Communication Monographs 49 (1982):
                        290–308.

                      5.   David B. Buller and R. Kelly Aune, “The Effects of Speech Rate Similar-
                        ity on Compliance: An Application of Communication Accommodation
                        Theory,” Western Journal of Speech Communication 56 (1992): 37–53.
                     6.   J. Burgoon, D. W. Buller, and W. G. Woodhall, Nonverbal Communication:
                        The Unspoken Dialogue, 2nd ed. (New York: Harper & Row, 1989). See
                        also M. Knapp and J. A. Hall, Nonverbal Communication in Human Interac-
                        tion, 3rd ed. (Fort Worth, Tex.: Harcourt, Brace, and Jovanovich, 1992).
                     7.   L. A. Malandro, L. Barker, and D. A. Barker, Nonverbal Communication, 2nd
                        ed. (New York: Random House, 1989).

                     8.   V. P. Richmond and J. C. McCroskey, Nonverbal Behavior in Interpersonal
                        Relationships (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1991).
                     9.   R. Sommer, “Man’s Proximate Environment,” Journal of Social Issues 22
                        (1966): 60.
                     10.  Ellen Berscheid and Elaine Walster, “Beauty and the Best,” Psychology Today
                        5, no. 10 (1972): 42–46.
                    11.  D. Leathers, Successful Nonverbal Communication: Principles and Practices (New
                        York: Macmillan, 1986).
                    12.  Malandro, Barker, and Barker, Nonverbal Communication.
                    13.  P. Ekman and W. V. Friesen, Unmasking the Face: A Guide to Recognizing
                        Emotions from Facial Expression (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall,
                        1975). See also P. Ekman, W. V. Friesen, and S. Ancoli, “Facial Signs of
                        Emotional Expression,” Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 39 (1980):
                        1125–34.
                    14.  Nicole C. Wong, “Palo Alto May Relent—It’s OK to Frown.” The Sacramento
                        Bee, 18 April 2003, A6.
                    15.  P. Ekman, Telling Lies (New York: Norton, 1985). See also Bella M. De-
                        Paulo, Miron Zuckerman, and Robert Rosenthal, “Humans as Lie Detec-
                        tors,” Journal of Communication 30 (1980): 129–39; R. E. Kraut, “Verbal and
                        Nonverbal Cues in the Perception of Lying,” Journal of Personality and Social
                        Psychology 36 (1978): 380–91.

                    16.  Judee Burgoon, “Nonverbal Communication Research in the 1970s: An
                        Overview,” in Communication Yearbook 4, ed. D. Nimmo (New Brunswick,
                        N.J.: Transaction Books, 1980), 179–97.
                    17.  Joseph A. Devito, The Communication Handbook: A Dictionary (New York:
                        Harper & Row, 1986), 105.

                    18.  Rolf Potts, “A Marine Corps Primer on Cultural Sensitivity in Arab
                        Lands,” Rolf Potts’ Vagabonding, 23 July 2004. [Retrieved from                       315
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