Serveur d'exploration sur les dispositifs haptiques

Attention, ce site est en cours de développement !
Attention, site généré par des moyens informatiques à partir de corpus bruts.
Les informations ne sont donc pas validées.

Iconic Gestures Facilitate Discourse Comprehension in Individuals With Superior Immediate Memory for Body Configurations.

Identifieur interne : 003C38 ( Ncbi/Checkpoint ); précédent : 003C37; suivant : 003C39

Iconic Gestures Facilitate Discourse Comprehension in Individuals With Superior Immediate Memory for Body Configurations.

Auteurs : Ying Choon Wu ; Seana Coulson [États-Unis]

Source :

RBID : pubmed:26381507

Abstract

To understand a speaker's gestures, people may draw on kinesthetic working memory (KWM)-a system for temporarily remembering body movements. The present study explored whether sensitivity to gesture meaning was related to differences in KWM capacity. KWM was evaluated through sequences of novel movements that participants viewed and reproduced with their own bodies. Gesture sensitivity was assessed through a priming paradigm. Participants judged whether multimodal utterances containing congruent, incongruent, or no gestures were related to subsequent picture probes depicting the referents of those utterances. Individuals with low KWM were primarily inhibited by incongruent speech-gesture primes, whereas those with high KWM showed facilitation-that is, they were able to identify picture probes more quickly when preceded by congruent speech and gestures than by speech alone. Group differences were most apparent for discourse with weakly congruent speech and gestures. Overall, speech-gesture congruency effects were positively correlated with KWM abilities, which may help listeners match spatial properties of gestures to concepts evoked by speech.

DOI: 10.1177/0956797615597671
PubMed: 26381507


Affiliations:


Links toward previous steps (curation, corpus...)


Links to Exploration step

pubmed:26381507

Le document en format XML

<record>
<TEI>
<teiHeader>
<fileDesc>
<titleStmt>
<title xml:lang="en">Iconic Gestures Facilitate Discourse Comprehension in Individuals With Superior Immediate Memory for Body Configurations.</title>
<author>
<name sortKey="Wu, Ying Choon" sort="Wu, Ying Choon" uniqKey="Wu Y" first="Ying Choon" last="Wu">Ying Choon Wu</name>
<affiliation>
<nlm:affiliation>Institute for Neural Computation.</nlm:affiliation>
<wicri:noCountry code="no comma">Institute for Neural Computation.</wicri:noCountry>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Coulson, Seana" sort="Coulson, Seana" uniqKey="Coulson S" first="Seana" last="Coulson">Seana Coulson</name>
<affiliation wicri:level="1">
<nlm:affiliation>Department of Cognitive Science, University of California, San Diego coulson@cogsci.ucsd.edu.</nlm:affiliation>
<country wicri:rule="url">États-Unis</country>
<wicri:regionArea>Department of Cognitive Science, University of California</wicri:regionArea>
<wicri:noRegion>University of California</wicri:noRegion>
</affiliation>
</author>
</titleStmt>
<publicationStmt>
<idno type="wicri:source">PubMed</idno>
<date when="2015">2015</date>
<idno type="RBID">pubmed:26381507</idno>
<idno type="pmid">26381507</idno>
<idno type="doi">10.1177/0956797615597671</idno>
<idno type="wicri:Area/PubMed/Corpus">000247</idno>
<idno type="wicri:Area/PubMed/Curation">000247</idno>
<idno type="wicri:Area/PubMed/Checkpoint">000323</idno>
<idno type="wicri:Area/Ncbi/Merge">003C38</idno>
<idno type="wicri:Area/Ncbi/Curation">003C38</idno>
<idno type="wicri:Area/Ncbi/Checkpoint">003C38</idno>
</publicationStmt>
<sourceDesc>
<biblStruct>
<analytic>
<title xml:lang="en">Iconic Gestures Facilitate Discourse Comprehension in Individuals With Superior Immediate Memory for Body Configurations.</title>
<author>
<name sortKey="Wu, Ying Choon" sort="Wu, Ying Choon" uniqKey="Wu Y" first="Ying Choon" last="Wu">Ying Choon Wu</name>
<affiliation>
<nlm:affiliation>Institute for Neural Computation.</nlm:affiliation>
<wicri:noCountry code="no comma">Institute for Neural Computation.</wicri:noCountry>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<name sortKey="Coulson, Seana" sort="Coulson, Seana" uniqKey="Coulson S" first="Seana" last="Coulson">Seana Coulson</name>
<affiliation wicri:level="1">
<nlm:affiliation>Department of Cognitive Science, University of California, San Diego coulson@cogsci.ucsd.edu.</nlm:affiliation>
<country wicri:rule="url">États-Unis</country>
<wicri:regionArea>Department of Cognitive Science, University of California</wicri:regionArea>
<wicri:noRegion>University of California</wicri:noRegion>
</affiliation>
</author>
</analytic>
<series>
<title level="j">Psychological science</title>
<idno type="eISSN">1467-9280</idno>
<imprint>
<date when="2015" type="published">2015</date>
</imprint>
</series>
</biblStruct>
</sourceDesc>
</fileDesc>
<profileDesc>
<textClass></textClass>
</profileDesc>
</teiHeader>
<front>
<div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">To understand a speaker's gestures, people may draw on kinesthetic working memory (KWM)-a system for temporarily remembering body movements. The present study explored whether sensitivity to gesture meaning was related to differences in KWM capacity. KWM was evaluated through sequences of novel movements that participants viewed and reproduced with their own bodies. Gesture sensitivity was assessed through a priming paradigm. Participants judged whether multimodal utterances containing congruent, incongruent, or no gestures were related to subsequent picture probes depicting the referents of those utterances. Individuals with low KWM were primarily inhibited by incongruent speech-gesture primes, whereas those with high KWM showed facilitation-that is, they were able to identify picture probes more quickly when preceded by congruent speech and gestures than by speech alone. Group differences were most apparent for discourse with weakly congruent speech and gestures. Overall, speech-gesture congruency effects were positively correlated with KWM abilities, which may help listeners match spatial properties of gestures to concepts evoked by speech.</div>
</front>
</TEI>
<affiliations>
<list>
<country>
<li>États-Unis</li>
</country>
</list>
<tree>
<noCountry>
<name sortKey="Wu, Ying Choon" sort="Wu, Ying Choon" uniqKey="Wu Y" first="Ying Choon" last="Wu">Ying Choon Wu</name>
</noCountry>
<country name="États-Unis">
<noRegion>
<name sortKey="Coulson, Seana" sort="Coulson, Seana" uniqKey="Coulson S" first="Seana" last="Coulson">Seana Coulson</name>
</noRegion>
</country>
</tree>
</affiliations>
</record>

Pour manipuler ce document sous Unix (Dilib)

EXPLOR_STEP=$WICRI_ROOT/Ticri/CIDE/explor/HapticV1/Data/Ncbi/Checkpoint
HfdSelect -h $EXPLOR_STEP/biblio.hfd -nk 003C38 | SxmlIndent | more

Ou

HfdSelect -h $EXPLOR_AREA/Data/Ncbi/Checkpoint/biblio.hfd -nk 003C38 | SxmlIndent | more

Pour mettre un lien sur cette page dans le réseau Wicri

{{Explor lien
   |wiki=    Ticri/CIDE
   |area=    HapticV1
   |flux=    Ncbi
   |étape=   Checkpoint
   |type=    RBID
   |clé=     pubmed:26381507
   |texte=   Iconic Gestures Facilitate Discourse Comprehension in Individuals With Superior Immediate Memory for Body Configurations.
}}

Pour générer des pages wiki

HfdIndexSelect -h $EXPLOR_AREA/Data/Ncbi/Checkpoint/RBID.i   -Sk "pubmed:26381507" \
       | HfdSelect -Kh $EXPLOR_AREA/Data/Ncbi/Checkpoint/biblio.hfd   \
       | NlmPubMed2Wicri -a HapticV1 

Wicri

This area was generated with Dilib version V0.6.23.
Data generation: Mon Jun 13 01:09:46 2016. Site generation: Wed Mar 6 09:54:07 2024