Gesture, thought and spatial language
Published online: 6 June 2002
https://doi.org/10.1075/gest.1.1.04emm
https://doi.org/10.1075/gest.1.1.04emm
This study explores the conceptual and communicative roles of gesture by examining the consequences of gesture prevention for the type of spatial language used to solve a spatial problem. English speakers were asked to describe where to place a group of blocks so that the blocks completely filled a puzzle grid. Half the subjects were allowed to gesture and half were prevented from gesturing. In addition, half the subjects could see their addressee and half could not. Addressee visibility affected how reliant subjects were on specifying puzzle grid co-ordinates, regardless of gesture condition. When describing block locations, subjects who were allowed to gesture were more likely to describe block orientation and rotation, but only when they could see the addressee. Further, gesture and speech complemented each other such that subjects were less likely to lexically specify rotation direction when this information was expressed by gesture; however, this was not a deliberate communicative choice because subjects who were not visible to their addressee also tended to leave rotation direction unspecified when they gestured. Finally, speakers produced deictic anaphoric constructions (e.g., “turn it this way”) which referred to their own gestures only when they could see the addressee. Together, these findings support the hypothesis that gesture is both an act of communication and an act of thought, and the results fail to support the hypothesis that gesture functions primarily to facilitate lexical retrieval.
Cited by (53)
Cited by 53 other publications
Özer, Demet, Aslı Özyürek & Tilbe Göksun
Bavelas, Janet
Kodama, Kentaro, Daichi Shimizu & Ken Fujiwara
Asalıoğlu, Esma Nur & Tilbe Göksun
Aydin, Cagla, Tilbe Göksun, Ege Otenen, Selma Berfin Tanis, Yağmur Damla Şentürk & Barbara Dritschel
Hordemann, Glen, Francis Quek & Larry Powell
Kita, Sotaro & Karen Emmorey
Werner, Adam F. & Jamie C. Gorman
Nicol, Madeline M. & Nikole D. Patson
Cravotta, Alice, Pilar Prieto & M. Grazia Busà
Mesh, Kate, Emiliana Cruz, Joost van de Weijer, Niclas Burenhult & Marianne Gullberg
Tversky, Barbara & Azadeh Jamalian
Salle, Alexander
Cohen, Cathy & Ciara R. Wigham
Iriguchi, Mayuko, Rumi Fujimura, Hiroki Koda, Nobuo Masataka & Hisao Nishijo
Iwasaki, Noriko & Keiko Yoshioka
2019. Iconicity in L2 Japanese speakers’ multi-modal language use. In Ideophones, Mimetics and Expressives [Iconicity in Language and Literature, 16], ► pp. 265 ff.
Li, Heng & Yu Cao
Polo, Claire & Jean-Marc Colletta
Cooperrider, Kensy, James Slotta & Rafael Núñez
Cooperrider, Kensy
Holler, Judith & Janet Bavelas
2017. Multi-modal communication of common ground. In Why gesture? [Gesture Studies, 7], ► pp. 213 ff.
van Nispen, Karin, W. Mieke. E. van de Sandt-Koenderman & Emiel Krahmer
Mazur-Palandre, Audrey & Kristine Lund
2016. Explanatory content and visibility effects on the young child’s verbal and gestural behavior in free dialogues. Language, Interaction and Acquisition 7:2 ► pp. 180 ff.
Rowbotham, Samantha, Donna M. Lloyd, Judith Holler & Alison Wearden
Bavelas, Janet, Jennifer Gerwing & Sara Healing
Child, Simon, Anna Theakston & Simone Pika
2014. How do modelled gestures influence preschool children’s spontaneous gesture production?. Gesture 14:1 ► pp. 1 ff.
Hoetjes, Marieke, Emiel Krahmer & Marc Swerts
Cornelius, Caroline J., Mai Anh Nguyen, Caroline C. Hayes & Roopa Makena
Göksun, Tilbe, Susan Goldin-Meadow, Nora Newcombe & Thomas Shipley
Johnson, Sarah, Naomi Cocks & Lucy Dipper
Kataoka, Kuniyoshi
Seungwon Kim, Gun A. Lee & Nobuchika Sakata
Tutton, Mark
Wittmann, Michael C., Virginia J. Flood & Katrina E. Black
CASEY, SHANNON, KAREN EMMOREY & HEATHER LARRABEE
Rowbotham, Samantha, Judith Holler, Donna Lloyd & Alison Wearden
Rowbotham, Samantha, Judith Holler, Donna Lloyd & Alison Wearden
Cornelius, Caroline J. & Caroline C. Hayes
Hayes, Caroline C., Ashok K. Goel, Irem Y. Tumer, Alice M. Agogino & William C. Regli
Holler, Judith & Katie Wilkin
Le Guen, Olivier
Stieff, Mike, Mary Hegarty & Ghislain Deslongchamps
Goldin‐Meadow, Susan & Jana M. Iverson
Bavelas, Janet, Jennifer Gerwing, Chantelle Sutton & Danielle Prevost
EMMOREY, KAREN, HELSA B. BORINSTEIN, ROBIN THOMPSON & TAMAR H. GOLLAN
Kimbara, Irene
Namy, Laura L. & Nora S. Newcombe
Wu, Ying Choon & Seana Coulson
Alibali, Martha W.
Hegarty, Mary, Sarah Mayer, Sarah Kriz & Madeleine Keehner
Fussell, Susan R., Leslie D. Setlock, Jie Yang, Jiazhi Ou, Elizabeth Mauer & Adam D. I. Kramer
Payrató, Lluís
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 9 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.
