Cognitive skills and gesture–speech redundancy
Formulation difficulty or communicative strategy?
Published online: 8 September 2011
https://doi.org/10.1075/gest.11.1.03hos
https://doi.org/10.1075/gest.11.1.03hos
Speakers sometimes convey information in their gestures that they do not convey in the accompanying speech. The present study examined whether individual differences in the production of non-redundant gesture–speech combinations are related to individual differences in speakers’ spatial and verbal skills. We classified speakers as spatial dominant, verbal dominant, or equally matched on the basis of the difference in their performance on a spatial visualization test and a verbal fluency test. We used the coding procedure developed by Alibali et al. (2009) to code speakers’ gesture–speech redundancy as they narrated an animated cartoon. Spatial-dominant speakers produced a higher proportion of non-redundant gesture–speech combinations than other speakers. The results suggest that some speakers may use non-redundant gesture–speech combinations as a communicative strategy that enables them to capitalize on their strong imagistic representations.
Keywords: verbal skills, gesture, spatial skills, image, gesture–speech redundancy
Cited by (24)
Cited by 24 other publications
Özer, Demet, Aslı Özyürek & Tilbe Göksun
Davis, Robert O., Yong‐Jik Lee, Joseph Vincent & Lili Wan
KERN, Friederike, Ulrich BODEN, Anne NEMETH, Sofia KOUTALIDIS, Olga ABRAMOV, Stefan KOPP & Katharina J. ROHLFING
Khodadadi, Samira, Elena Nicoladis, Anahita Shokrkon & Shiva Zarezadehkheibari
정, 부자 & 은별 장
Emir Özder, Levent, Demet Özer & Tilbe Göksun
Kita, Sotaro & Karen Emmorey
Rombouts, Ellen, Liesl Leenen, Bea Maes & Inge Zink
Zhao, Wanying
Arslan, Burcu & Tilbe Göksun
Abramov, Olga, Friederike Kern, Sofia Koutalidis, Ulrich Mertens, Katharina Rohlfing & Stefan Kopp
Tscholl, Michael, Jason Morphew & Robb Lindgren
Özer, Demet & Tilbe Göksun
Özer, Demet & Tilbe Göksun
Hostetter, Autumn B. & Martha W. Alibali
Alibali, Martha W., Amelia Yeo, Autumn B. Hostetter & Sotaro Kita
2017. Representational gestures help speakers package information for speaking. In Why gesture? [Gesture Studies, 7], ► pp. 15 ff.
Cook, Susan Wagner & Kimberly M. Fenn
2017. The function of gesture in learning and memory. In Why gesture? [Gesture Studies, 7], ► pp. 129 ff.
Kopp, Stefan
Lavelli, Manuela & Marinella Majorano
Abner, Natasha, Kensy Cooperrider & Susan Goldin‐Meadow
Hostetter, Autumn & Elina Mainela-Arnold
Mainela‐Arnold, Elina, Martha W. Alibali, Autumn B. Hostetter & Julia L. Evans
Wu, Ying Choon & Seana Coulson
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.
