The semantic specificity hypothesis : when gestures do not depend upon the presence of a listener

Pine, K., Gurney, Daniel and Fletcher, Ben (2010) The semantic specificity hypothesis : when gestures do not depend upon the presence of a listener. Journal of Nonverbal Behavior, 34 (3). pp. 169-178. ISSN 0191-5886
Copy

Humans gesture even when their gestures can serve no communicative function (e.g., when the listener cannot see them). This study explores the intrapersonal function of gestures, and the semantic content of the speech they accompany. Sixty-eight adults participated in pairs, communicating on an object description task. Visibility of partner was manipulated; participants completed half the task behind a screen. Participants produced iconic gestures significantly more for praxic items (i.e., items with physically manipulable properties) than non-praxic items, regardless of visibility of partner. These findings support the semantic specificity hypothesis, whereby a gesture is integrally associated with the semantic properties of the word it accompanies. Where those semantic properties include a high motor component the likelihood of a gesture being produced is increased, irrespective of communication demands.


picture_as_pdf
901121.pdf

View Download

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core OpenURL ContextObject in Span METS HTML Citation MODS MPEG-21 DIDL ASCII Citation OpenURL ContextObject Data Cite XML RIOXX2 XML
Export

Downloads
?