Article published In: Gestural Communication in Human and Non-Human Primates
Edited by Dario Maestripieri and Jill P. Morford
[Evolution of Communication 1:2] 1997
► pp. 159–192
The Role of Gesture in the Establishment of Symbolic Abilities
Continuities and Discontinuities in Early Language Development
Published online: 1 January 1997
https://doi.org/10.1075/eoc.1.2.02loc
https://doi.org/10.1075/eoc.1.2.02loc
Language develops in infancy as emerging cognitive abilities come on-line to handle the infant's experience of the world, and thereby enrich it. The attentional and motivational structuring of that experience is elaborated in the course of social interaction, but from a base in the a priori values that 'being an infant' create as to what infants find 'interesting' in their experiential worlds. There is a continuity of experience, but a reworking of it that yields apparently discontinuous stages. These stages do not map onto traditional notions such as preverbal stage, one-word stage, and combinatorial stage, but are more appropriately captured as presymbolic, symbolic, and propositional. Thus, some early word uses are pre-symbolic, and some later non-verbal gestures are propositional: that the production media might differ for words versus gestures does not appear to be a fact of major significance.
Cited by (10)
Cited by ten other publications
Mattos, Otávio & Wolfram Hinzen
Ng, Melvin Mai-Rong, Özlem Ece Demir & Wing Chee So
2015. The role of gesture in referential communication. In The Acquisition of Reference [Trends in Language Acquisition Research, 15], ► pp. 105 ff.
Stefanini, Silvia, Arianna Bello, Maria Cristina Caselli, Jana M. Iverson & Virginia Volterra
Lock, Andrew
Camaioni, Luigia, Tiziana Aureli, Francesca Bellagamba & Alan Fogel
Roth, Wolff-Michael
Roth, Wolff-Michael
Wolff-Michael Roth & Daniel V. Lawless
Roth, Wolff‐Michael & Daniel Lawless
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 8 december 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
