A Comparative Analysis of Asian and African Motivational Speakers: Using Neuro-Linguistic Programming
Abstract
This study examines the diverse nature of motivational speeches to determine the ways that can assist people by challenging their ideas and convictions. The study examines the efficacy in this kind of speech and the power it has to impact people. The study focuses on the way that people's responses can be both cognitive as well as emotional for the ones who inspire. Utilizing the Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) in order to impart an understanding of a particular model that focuses on particular ways to talk that facilitate the circulation of information during interaction and in public speaking. The study also provides an analysis of motivational speeches across diverse continents. The study is concentrated on NLP techniques. This research employs a mixed-methods approach, which blends qualitative analysis to find NLP patterns with qualitative techniques to examine the effect of motivation of speeches. The research employs corpus tool which is a Lancs Box that helps to identify NLP patterns that incorporate the notions in comparative structure, mind reading, lost performatives, universal quantifiers, modal operators cause & effect and presupposition. The study's result shows the reality that African motivational speakers employ NLP patterns more frequently compared to Asian speakers and are more likely to use them often than speakers from different continents. The research that follows will enrich the research by studying the relation between speaker and speech performance in order to obtain a deeper understanding of the way that NLP methods affect viewers' perceptions.
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