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ObjectiveIn essence, all communication is multimodal: we use language, gesture, posture, and other non-verbal modes often at the same time to communicate. We may use many media when conducting research. We may also use creative ways of jotting down what we perceive, i.e. using poetry and other creative writing or art forms to freeze what we understand. We explain the world we investigate to others in multimodal ways.
Multimodal Communication is a venue for researchers in diverse fields of study, who are broaching communication from an interdisciplinary perspective; exploring diverse and multimodal ways to conduct research and illustrate findings. The Journal is interdisciplinary and open to papers from anthropology, through to art, math, psychology, science, sport, and beyond.
Although wide in disciplinary scope, all articles have to develop multimodality in some way. An article may use visuals/writing/sound to explore a theme; be highly theoretical and explain a philosophical point relevant to the study of multimodality; or may be based on an empirical study integrating a number of modes.
Article formatsStyle of exposition is not standardized, authors may send research articles, essays, visual essays or other creative pieces
Multimodal Communication is covered by the following services:
SubmissionOnline Submission of Manuscripts
We look forward to receiving your manuscript!
Hybrid Open Access
Authors have the option to publish their article under an open access license. The standard article processing charge for a hybrid open access article is 2,000 Euro (plus VAT if applicable). Please note that corresponding authors from institutions with which we have a transformative agreement, can publish open access without paying the fee. More information on the eligible institutions and articles can be found here.
Editorial Board
EditorSigrid Norris; School of Linguistics and Applied Language Studies, Victoria University of Wellington; New Zealand
Editorial AssistantJarret Geenen, Department of Modern Languages and Cultures, Radboud University; Netherlands
Review EditorJesse Pirini; School of Management, Victoria University of Wellington; New Zealand
Elisabeth Adami; University of Leeds, UKNajma Al Zidjaly; Sultan Qaboos University; OmanJohn Bateman; Bremen University; GermanyEmilia Djonov; Macquarie University, NSW; AustraliaGaëlle Ferre; Chemin de la Censive du Tertre; FranceRodney H. Jones; City University of Hong Kong; ChinaRick Iedema; University of Technology Sydney; AustraliaPia Lane; University of Oslo, NorwayJay Lemke; University of California, San Diego; USACarmen Daniela Maier; Aarhus University; DenmarkDavid McNeill; The University of Chicago; USAMeredith Marra; Victoria University of Welington; New ZealandSarah Pink; Loughborough University; UKPirkko Raudaskoski; University of Aalborg; DenmarkMartin Reisigl; University of Bern; SwitzerlandJürgen Streeck; The University of Texas at Austin; USATheo van Leeuwen; University of Technology Sydney; AustraliaKaren Wohlwend; Indiana University; USA