2002
DOI: 10.1006/ijhc.2002.1021
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Prolegomena of a theory of between-person coordination of speech and gesture

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Cited by 13 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…For example, corroborating evidence for gestures being communicatively intended comes from studies manipulating the social and communicative context of talk. Studies have observed effects of addressee location on gesture orientation and gesture space (Furuyama 2002;Ö zyürek 2002). Bavelas et al (2002) showed that speakers describing stimuli to an imagined interlocutor, who they were told will either see a videorecording or hear a tape-recording of their description, produced more gestures when they thought their recording would be seen by the other person.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, corroborating evidence for gestures being communicatively intended comes from studies manipulating the social and communicative context of talk. Studies have observed effects of addressee location on gesture orientation and gesture space (Furuyama 2002;Ö zyürek 2002). Bavelas et al (2002) showed that speakers describing stimuli to an imagined interlocutor, who they were told will either see a videorecording or hear a tape-recording of their description, produced more gestures when they thought their recording would be seen by the other person.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The verbal exchanges that occur during a conversation also can operate to couple the movements of interacting individuals. In fact, not only can verbal exchanges operate to entrain the gestural (Furuyama, 2000(Furuyama, , 2002Furuyama, Hayashi, & Mishima, 2005) and postural (Condon & Ogston, 1966;Kendon, 1970;LaFrance, 1982;Shockley, Santana, & Fowler, 2003) movements of interacting individuals without the individuals intending to entrain, but they also can lead to the interacting individuals converging in dialect (Giles, 1973), speaking rate (Street, 1984), vocal intensity (Natale, 1975), and pausing frequency (Cappella & Planalp, 1981; see Giles, Coupland, & Coupland, 1991, for a review).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been hypothesized that the "ba-ba" babbling of infants (with onset around 7 months) may be a nonverbal motor activity related to the emergent control over mouth and jaw, or a linguistic activity reflecting early sensitivity to phonetic-syllabic patterns (Pettito, Holowka, Sergio, Levy, & Ostry, 2004). Drawing on the classic work by Kendon (1972), McNeill has long argued that there is an extremely close synchrony between gesture and speech such that the two operate as an inseparable, coherent unit that embodies the language production process itself rather than just reflecting different outputs from it (McNeill, 1992(McNeill, , 2000; see also Furuyama, 2002). Thus, words and gestures are not just expressions of thought but instead such acts constitute the thinking process itself.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%