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Stable points of contact such as feet on the floor or hands on a table that reveal grounding or unease.
A speaker who began steady on both feet starts shifting weight as the questions grow harder.
Loss of steady anchoring can signal rising discomfort, while firm grounding suggests composure.
Furniture and space limit how people anchor, so account for the practical setting.
The normal, relaxed manner of a person when they are calm and unpressured.
ExploreInterpreting several cues together rather than resting a conclusion on a single gesture.
ExploreThe influence of the surrounding setting on how a behaviour should be understood.
ExploreMade with Emergent