| Literature DB >> 25664327 |
Caroline Trofatter1, Carly Kontra1, Sian Beilock1, Susan Goldin-Meadow1.
Abstract
The coordination of speech with gesture elicits changes in speakers' problem-solving behavior beyond the changes elicited by the coordination of speech with action. Participants solved the Tower of Hanoi puzzle (TOH1); explained their solution using speech coordinated with either Gestures (Gesture+Talk) or Actions (Action+Talk), or demonstrated their solution using Actions alone (Action); then solved the puzzle again (TOH2). For some participants (Switch group), disk weights during TOH2 were reversed (smallest = heaviest). Only in the Gesture+Talk Switch group did performance worsen from TOH1 to TOH2 - for all other groups, performance improved. In the Gesture+Talk Switch group, more one-handed gestures about the smallest disk during the explanation hurt subsequent performance, compared to all other groups. These findings contradict the hypothesis that gesture affects thought by promoting the coordination of task-relevant hand movements with task-relevant speech, and lend support to the hypothesis that gesture grounds thought in action via its representational properties.Entities:
Keywords: action; embodied cognition; gestures; mental representations; problem solving; speech
Year: 2015 PMID: 25664327 PMCID: PMC4318567 DOI: 10.1080/23273798.2014.905692
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lang Cogn Neurosci ISSN: 2327-3798 Impact factor: 2.331