Architects of Communication Scholarship - Judee Burgoon on developing theories of nonverbal communication


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May 26 2023 23 mins  

This episode features Professor Judee Burgoon in conversation with Professor Norah Dunbar. They discuss how Judee became interested in the field of communication, especially interpersonal communication. Judee shared how she developed EVT, Expectancy Violations Theory, one of the most influential theories in the field, and her other contributions like interpersonal deception theory. Also, she talked about her thinking of the big intellectual questions of communication in the next decade.


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Featuring

Ellen Wartella

Norah Dunbar

Judee Burgoon

Sponsor:

Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore


More from the host & speakers:


Ellen Wartella

Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani Professor of Communication | Professor of Psychology, Human Development and Social Policy, and Medical Social Sciences

Northwestern University

Director, Center on Media and Human Development

Twitter: @CMHD_NU

Norah Dunbar

Professor, Department of Communication

University of California Santa Barbara

Twitter: @nedPhD


Judee Burgoon

Director of Research, Center for the Management of Information

Professor of Communication

Professor of Family Studies and Human Development

University of Arizona

Facebook: [email protected]

LinkedIn: Judee Burgoon

Works referenced in episode:

Burgoon, J. K., Buller, D. B., & Woodall, W. G. (1989). Nonverbal communication: The unspoken dialogue. Harpercollins College Division.

Burgoon, J. K., Bonito, J. A., Ramirez Jr, A., Dunbar, N. E., Kam, K., & Fischer, J. (2002). Testing the interactivity principle: Effects of mediation, propinquity, and verbal and nonverbal modalities in interpersonal interaction. Journal of communication, 52(3), 657-677.

Copy and Audio Editor:

Kate In


Executive Producer:

DeVante Brown