Literature DB >> 15996556

Gesture is at the cutting edge of early language development.

Seyda Ozçalişkan1, Susan Goldin-Meadow.   

Abstract

Children who produce one word at a time often use gesture to supplement their speech, turning a single word into an utterance that conveys a sentence-like meaning ('eat'+point at cookie). Interestingly, the age at which children first produce supplementary gesture-speech combinations of this sort reliably predicts the age at which they first produce two-word utterances. Gesture thus serves as a signal that a child will soon be ready to begin producing multi-word sentences. The question is what happens next. Gesture could continue to expand a child's communicative repertoire over development, combining with words to convey increasingly complex ideas. Alternatively, after serving as an opening wedge into language, gesture could cease its role as a forerunner of linguistic change. We addressed this question in a sample of 40 typically developing children, each observed at 14, 18, and 22 months. The number of supplementary gesture-speech combinations the children produced increased significantly from 14 to 22 months. More importantly, the types of supplementary combinations the children produced changed over time and presaged changes in their speech. Children produced three distinct constructions across the two modalities several months before these same constructions appeared entirely within speech. Gesture thus continues to be at the cutting edge of early language development, providing stepping-stones to increasingly complex linguistic constructions.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 15996556     DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2005.01.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cognition        ISSN: 0010-0277


  62 in total

1.  The impact of object and gesture imitation training on language use in children with autism spectrum disorder.

Authors:  Brooke Ingersoll; Katherine Lalonde
Journal:  J Speech Lang Hear Res       Date:  2010-07-14       Impact factor: 2.297

2.  When gesture does and does not promote learning.

Authors:  Susan Goldin-Meadow
Journal:  Lang Cogn       Date:  2010-05-01

3.  Role of maternal gesture use in speech use by children with fragile X syndrome.

Authors:  Laura J Hahn; B Jean Zimmer; Nancy C Brady; Rebecca E Swinburne Romine; Kandace K Fleming
Journal:  Am J Speech Lang Pathol       Date:  2014-05       Impact factor: 2.408

4.  The co-emergence of cognition, language, and speech motor control in early development: a longitudinal correlation study.

Authors:  Ignatius S B Nip; Jordan R Green; David B Marx
Journal:  J Commun Disord       Date:  2010-09-17       Impact factor: 2.288

5.  Gesturing has a larger impact on problem-solving than action, even when action is accompanied by words.

Authors:  Caroline Trofatter; Carly Kontra; Sian Beilock; Susan Goldin-Meadow
Journal:  Lang Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2015-03       Impact factor: 2.331

6.  Multimodality in infancy: vocal-motor and speech-gesture coordinations in typical and atypical development.

Authors:  Jana M Iverson
Journal:  Enfance       Date:  2010-09

7.  Early communicative gestures prospectively predict language development and executive function in early childhood.

Authors:  Laura J Kuhn; Michael T Willoughby; Makeba Parramore Wilbourn; Lynne Vernon-Feagans; Clancy B Blair
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2014-04-29

8.  Exploring Infant Gesture and Joint Attention as Related Constructs and as Predictors of Later Language.

Authors:  Virginia C Salo; Meredith L Rowe; Bethany Reeb-Sutherland
Journal:  Infancy       Date:  2018-02-06

9.  Early gesture provides a helping hand to spoken vocabulary development for children with autism, Down syndrome and typical development.

Authors:  Şeyda Özçalışkan; Lauren B Adamson; Nevena Dimitrova; Stephanie Baumann
Journal:  J Cogn Dev       Date:  2017-06-08

10.  Turkish- and English-speaking children display sensitivity to perceptual context in the referring expressions they produce in speech and gesture.

Authors:  Ozlem Ece Demir; Wing-Chee So; Asli Ozyürek; Susan Goldin-Meadow
Journal:  Lang Cogn Process       Date:  2011-10-25
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