Is vision necessary for the timely acquisition of language-specific patterns in co-speech gesture and their lack in silent gesture?

IF 3.1 1区 心理学 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL
Şeyda Özçalışkan, Ché Lucero, Susan Goldin-Meadow
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Blind adults display language-specificity in their packaging and ordering of events in speech. These differences affect the representation of events in co-speech gesture–gesturing with speech–but not in silent gesture–gesturing without speech. Here we examine when in development blind children begin to show adult-like patterns in co-speech and silent gesture. We studied speech and gestures produced by 30 blind and 30 sighted children learning Turkish, equally divided into 3 age groups: 5–6, 7–8, 9–10 years. The children were asked to describe three-dimensional spatial event scenes (e.g., running out of a house) first with speech, and then without speech using only their hands. We focused on physical motion events, which, in blind adults, elicit cross-linguistic differences in speech and co-speech gesture, but cross-linguistic similarities in silent gesture. Our results showed an effect of language on gesture when it was accompanied by speech (co-speech gesture), but not when it was used without speech (silent gesture) across both blind and sighted learners. The language-specific co-speech gesture pattern for both packaging and ordering semantic elements was present at the earliest ages we tested the blind and sighted children. The silent gesture pattern appeared later for blind children than sighted children for both packaging and ordering. Our findings highlight gesture as a robust and integral aspect of the language acquisition process at the early ages and provide insight into when language does and does not have an effect on gesture, even in blind children who lack visual access to gesture.

Research Highlights

  • Gestures, when produced with speech (i.e., co-speech gesture), follow language-specific patterns in event representation in both blind and sighted children.
  • Gestures, when produced without speech (i.e., silent gesture), do not follow the language-specific patterns in event representation in both blind and sighted children.
  • Language-specific patterns in speech and co-speech gestures are observable at the same time in blind and sighted children.
  • The cross-linguistic similarities in silent gestures begin slightly later in blind children than in sighted children.
视觉对于及时掌握共语手势中的语言特定模式以及无声手势中的语言特定模式是否必要?
成年盲人在言语事件的包装和排序方面表现出语言特异性。这些差异会影响事件在共同言语手势中的表征--有言语的手势--但不会影响无声手势--无言语的手势。在此,我们研究了盲童在发育过程中何时开始在共同言语和无声手势中表现出类似成人的模式。我们研究了 30 名学习土耳其语的盲童和 30 名视力正常儿童的语言和手势,他们被平均分成三个年龄组:5-6 岁、7-8 岁、9-10 岁。我们要求孩子们先用语言描述三维空间事件场景(如跑出房子),然后只用手不说话地描述。我们的研究重点是物理运动事件,这些事件在盲人成人中会引起说话和共同说话手势的跨语言差异,但在无声手势中会引起跨语言相似性。我们的研究结果表明,在盲人和视力正常的学习者中,当手势伴有语言(共语手势)时,语言会对手势产生影响,而当手势不伴有语言(无声手势)时,语言则不会对手势产生影响。在我们对盲童和视力正常儿童进行测试的最早年龄段,包装和排序语义元素的特定语言共语手势模式就已出现。与视力正常的儿童相比,盲童在包装和排序方面的无声手势模式出现得更晚。我们的研究结果表明,手势是儿童早期语言习得过程中不可或缺的重要环节,并有助于我们了解语言何时会对手势产生影响,何时不会对手势产生影响,即使是对缺乏手势视觉接触的盲童来说也是如此。在不说话的情况下做出的手势(即无声手势),在盲童和健视儿童的事件表征中都不遵循语言的特定模式。在盲童和健视儿童身上,可以同时观察到语言特定模式的言语和共同言语手势。盲童无声手势的跨语言相似性开始的时间略晚于健视儿童。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.10
自引率
8.10%
发文量
132
期刊介绍: Developmental Science publishes cutting-edge theory and up-to-the-minute research on scientific developmental psychology from leading thinkers in the field. It is currently the only journal that specifically focuses on human developmental cognitive neuroscience. Coverage includes: - Clinical, computational and comparative approaches to development - Key advances in cognitive and social development - Developmental cognitive neuroscience - Functional neuroimaging of the developing brain
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