What Are Behavior Patterns?
Rather than fixating on isolated gestures, the true art of interpreting nonverbal signals lies in identifying consistent behavior patterns in body language. These repeated sequences of cues provide a more well-rounded and reliable insight into an individual’s state or responses. This perspective on such understanding is foundational.
Defining Behavior Patterns in Body Language
These patterns are more than just fleeting movements, representing a cohesive set of signals. Single, isolated cues can be ambiguous. True patterns, however, emerge from observing an individual over time, a process crucial for accurate interpretation.
Core Characteristics
Core characteristics of these patterns include:
These patterns are indispensable. They are often composed of clusters of cues (groups of signals appearing simultaneously) or sequences of cues (a predictable order of different signals), reflecting more stable underlying states.
The Value of Observing Behavior Patterns
Focusing on these patterns offers substantial advantages for interpretation and understanding associated nonverbal signals:
Identifying and Interpreting Patterns Accurately
For accurate interpretation, observers usually identify these behavioral sequences across multiple interactions with the same individual. They look for recurring patterns or noticeable deviations from baseline behavior. For accurate and responsible observation in your analysis:
Examples of Behavior Patterns
The pattern of stress response is characterized by an individual consistently exhibiting neck-touching and increased self-soothing gestures (e.g., rubbing hands). They may show reduced eye contact when facing tight deadlines or public speaking.
The pattern of genuine engagement is seen when, during discussions on interesting topics, a person regularly leans in, maintains consistent eye contact, nods affirmatively, and uses open gestures. These are classic nonverbal signals of interest.
The pattern of disagreement/resistance is evident when someone, presented with ideas they internally oppose, may repeatedly show subtle cues. These can include slight headshakes, lip compression, and foot-tapping, even if they are verbally compliant.
Behavior Patterns in Body Language
Understanding these behavioral patterns moves beyond a simplistic “gesture X means Y” interpretation of nonverbal signals. It emphasizes observing the bigger picture of such cues for more subtle and reliable insights into an individual’s true state. This detailed analysis provides a richer perspective.