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Action’s influence on thought: The case of gesture

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  • [spatialintelligence.org]
  • [spatiallearning.org]
  • [silccenter.org]
  • [goldin-meadow-lab.uchicago.edu]
  • [goldin-meadow-lab.uchicago.edu]
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by Susan Goldin-meadow , Sian Beilock
Citations:33 - 10 self
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BibTeX

@MISC{Goldin-meadow_action’sinfluence,
    author = {Susan Goldin-meadow and Sian Beilock},
    title = {Action’s influence on thought: The case of gesture },
    year = {}
}

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Abstract

Recent research shows that our actions can influence how we think. A separate body of research shows that the gestures we produce when we speak can also influence how we think. Here we bring these two literatures together to explore whether gesture has an impact on thinking by virtue of its ability to reflect real-world actions. We first argue that gestures contain detailed perceptual-motor information about the actions they represent, information often not found in the speech that accompanies the gestures. We then show that the action features in gesture do not just reflect the gesturer’s thinking–– they can feed back and alter that thinking. Gesture actively brings action into a speaker’s mental representations, and those mental representations then affect behavior––at times more powerfully than the actions on which the gestures are based. Gesture thus has the potential to serve as a unique bridge between action and abstract thought.

Keyphrases

real-world action    speaker mental representation    recent research    recent year    traditional view    unique bridge    mental representation    abstract thought    cognitive scientist    separate body    research show    detailed perceptual-motor information   

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