2014
DOI: 10.3758/s13423-014-0681-7
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

The processing of speech, gesture, and action during language comprehension

Abstract: Hand gestures and speech form a single integrated system of meaning during language comprehension, but is gesture processed with speech in a unique fashion? We had subjects watch multimodal videos that presented auditory (words) and visual (gestures and actions on objects) information. Half of the subjects related the audio information to a written prime presented before the video, and the other half related the visual information to the written prime. For half of the multimodal video stimuli, the audio and vi… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

7
58
2

Year Published

2016
2016
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
9
1

Relationship

2
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 66 publications
(67 citation statements)
references
References 16 publications
7
58
2
Order By: Relevance
“…This information is taken up by recipients (e.g., Holler, Shovelton, & Beattie, 2009;S. D. Kelly, Barr, Church, & Lynch, 1999) and readily integrated with the information from the spoken channel (e.g., Kelly, Healey, Özyürek, & Holler, 2015;Kelly, Kravitz, & Hopkins, 2004;Willems, Özyürek, & Hagoort, 2007). Importantly, receiving gestural information in addition to speech appears to facilitate information processing in experimental settings as evidenced by faster reaction times to speech-plus-gesture compared to speech-only stimuli (Holle, Gunter, Rüschemeyer, Hennenlotter, & Iacoboni, 2008;Kelly, Özyürek, & Maris, 2010, Note 2;Nagels, Kircher, Steines, & Straube, 2015;Wu & Coulson, 2015).…”
Section: Language and The Bodymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This information is taken up by recipients (e.g., Holler, Shovelton, & Beattie, 2009;S. D. Kelly, Barr, Church, & Lynch, 1999) and readily integrated with the information from the spoken channel (e.g., Kelly, Healey, Özyürek, & Holler, 2015;Kelly, Kravitz, & Hopkins, 2004;Willems, Özyürek, & Hagoort, 2007). Importantly, receiving gestural information in addition to speech appears to facilitate information processing in experimental settings as evidenced by faster reaction times to speech-plus-gesture compared to speech-only stimuli (Holle, Gunter, Rüschemeyer, Hennenlotter, & Iacoboni, 2008;Kelly, Özyürek, & Maris, 2010, Note 2;Nagels, Kircher, Steines, & Straube, 2015;Wu & Coulson, 2015).…”
Section: Language and The Bodymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, although adults can seamlessly and easily integrate information conveyed in speech with gesture, they often fail to integrate that information with instrumental action. For example, adults can easily ignore actions that are incongruent with the speech with which they are produced, but they have difficulty ignoring gestures that are incongruent with the speech they accompany, suggesting a difference in the relative strength of speech-gesture integration vs. speech-action integration (Kelly, Healy, Özyürek, & Holler, 2014). Thus, gesture has a different relationship to speech than instrumental action does and, in turn, has a different effect on listeners than instrumental action.…”
Section: Part 3: Gesture’s Functions Are Supported By Its Action Propmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In other words, gesture does not depict a change in the world (e.g., opening a jar by twisting it), or display patterns of movement (e.g., performing steps in a dance), but instead represents movement that could change the world (e.g., a gesture showing how the jar could be twisted open) or represents movement that stands on its own (e.g., a gesture showing how the dance should be performed). Importantly, observers respond differently to gesture than to other types of movements (Dick, Goldin-Meadow, Hasson, Skipper, & Small, 2009; Kelly, Healy, Ozyurek, & Holler, 2014), and these differences in response can have an impact on thinking and learning (Novack, Congdon, Hemani-Lopez, & Goldin-Meadow, 2014; Trofatter, Kontra, Beilock, & Goldin-Meadow, 2014). Our goal is to determine the conditions under which a distinction between gesture and other types of movement is made, and to explore how those conditions contribute to a top-down categorization of movement as gesture.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%