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Hand and Mind: What Gestures Reveal about Thought
David McNeill
- 15 Aug 1992
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TL;DR: McNeill et al. as mentioned in this paper argue that gestures do not simply form a part of what is said and meant but have an impact on thought itself, and that gestures are global, synthetic, idiosyncratic, and imagistic.
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Abstract: What is the relation between gestures and speech? In terms of symbolic forms, of course, the spontaneous and unwitting gestures we make while talking differ sharply from spoken language itself. Whereas spoken language is linear, segmented, standardized, and arbitrary, gestures are global, synthetic, idiosyncratic, and imagistic. In Hand and Mind, David McNeill presents a bold theory of the essential unity of speech and the gestures that accompany it. This long-awaited, provocative study argues that the unity of gestures and language far exceeds the surface level of speech noted by previous researchers and in fact also includes the semantic and pragmatic levels of language. In effect, the whole concept of language must be altered to take into account the nonsegmented, instantaneous, and holistic images conveyed by gestures. McNeill and his colleagues carefully devised a standard methodology for examining the speech and gesture behavior of individuals engaged in narrative discourse. A research subject is shown a cartoon like the 1950 Canary Row--a classic Sylvester and Tweedy Bird caper that features Sylvester climbing up a downspout, swallowing a bowling ball and slamming into a brick wall. After watching the cartoon, the subject is videotaped recounting the story from memory to a listener who has not seen the cartoon. Painstaking analysis of the videotapes revealed that although the research subjects--children as well as adults, some neurologically impaired--represented a wide variety of linguistic groupings, the gestures of people speaking English and a half dozen other languages manifest the same principles. Relying on data from more than ten years of research, McNeill shows thatgestures do not simply form a part of what is said and meant but have an impact on thought itself. He persuasively argues that because gestures directly transfer mental images to visible forms, conveying ideas that language cannot always express, we must examine language and gesture
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Citations
Conceptual clusters in figurative language production.
Daniel P. Corts,Kristina Meyers +1 more
TL;DR: An interaction of the coherence, along with a conceptual understanding of a topic and the relative importance of the topic to the purpose of the speech, is offered as the most likely explanation for the clustering of figurative language in natural speech.
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Viewpoint in Language: Introduction: viewpoint and perspective in language and gesture, from the Ground down
Eve Sweetser
- 01 Jan 2012
TL;DR: From the Ground Down as mentioned in this paper is a book about human cognition and communication with a focus on the notion of "from the ground down" in which a single mind accesses multiple different viewpoint affordances on the same scene.
Is there a universal answering strategy for rejecting negative propositions? Typological evidence on the use of prosody and gesture.
TL;DR: The results of this investigation support the existence of a universal answering system for rejecting negative polar questions that integrates lexical and syntactic strategies with prosodic and gestural patterns, and instantiate the REJECT and ASSERT operators.
Representational disfluency in algebra: evidence from student gestures and speech
TL;DR: This article analyzed US middle school students' gestures and speech during interviews to understand students' reasoning while interpreting quantitative patterns represented by Cartesian graphs, defined as their abilities to work within and translate among representations.