Interpersonal communication includes message sending and message reception between two or more individuals. This can include all aspects of communication such as listening, persuading, asserting, non-verbal communication, and more. Interpersonal unconscious communication includes unintentional facial expressions, body language, tone of voice, and speech patterns while interacting with another individual that the other individual interprets for their own knowledge. There are six different reasons for non-verbal communication: • Complementing: adding extra information to verbal communication • Contradicting: the non-verbal messages contradict one's verbal messages • Repeating: emphasize or clarify the verbal message • Regulating: coordinate the verbal dialogue between people • Substituting: when a non-verbal message is used in place of a verbal message • Accenting: emphasizing a particular point in a verbal message This system may have been evolutionarily evolved to hint to other people emotional cues. When a person uses one of the following points, as stated above (i.e. intonation, facial expression...) they may do so to regulate the emotion of one or more people. The subject or the contents of the message may be less of importance rather than the transmission of emotional cues itself. Additionally, the manner of phrasing sentences and selection of words that the brain subconsciously generates are used as well to regulate other peoples emotions. Since a particular utilization of words may affect people differently such as
"That painting is unattractive." and
"That painting is ugly.", whereby the latter sentence will have a worse emotional impact than the former upon hearing. And here again the contents of the message are less of relevance than the actual emotional impact it will deliver. ==See also==