Clap, Clap, Clap - Unsystematic Review Essay on Clapping and Applause.

Alan Crawley
Author Information
  1. Alan Crawley: Universidad del Salvador, Buenos Aires, Argentina. Alan_crawley9@hotmail.com. ORCID

Abstract

The rationale for the following unsystematic review article is to provide a dense description of clapping behavior from an ethological, psychological, anthropological, sociological, ontological, and even physiological perspective. The article delves into its historical uses, possible biological-ethological evolution, and primitive and cultural polysemic-multipurpose social functions. It explores the different distal and immediate messages transmitted by the simple act of clapping, to its more complex attributes like synchronicity, social contagion, as a device of social status signaling, soft biometric data, and its, till now, mysterious subjective experience. The subtle distinction between clapping and applause will be explored. A list of primary social functions will be introduced based on the literature on clapping. In addition, a series of unresolved questions and possible research avenues will be suggested. In contrast, out of the scope of the essay and published as a second article will be the contents of clapping morphological variations and a comprehensive description of purposes achieved through them.

Keywords

References

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MeSH Term

Humans
Social Behavior
Biological Evolution

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