Publication | Closed Access
THE CONTRIBUTION OF KINESIC ILLUSTRATORS TOWARD THE COMPREHENSION OF VERBAL BEHAVIOR WITHIN UTTERANCES
121
Citations
13
References
1978
Year
NeurolinguisticsVerbal SegmentsPsycholinguisticsCognitionApplied LinguisticsCognitive LinguisticsExperimental PragmaticPhoneticsLanguage AcquisitionLanguage StudiesVisible Body MovementsVerbal InteractionHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceVerbal ComprehensionSpeech ProductionEmbodied CognitionSpeech CommunicationSpeech ProcessingParalinguisticsSpeech PerceptionLanguage ComprehensionLinguisticsNonverbal Communication
The study assessed the extent to which a speaker's visible body movements can improve verbal comprehension for listeners. Subjects responded to multiple-choice items designed to test their comprehension of 12 videotaped spoken utterances which had been obtained by asking speakers to describe either objects in motion (e.g., a tennis ball, a car, spraying water) or abstract concepts. The 60 subjects each responded to stimuli in one of three presentation conditions (audiovisual, audiovisual without lip and facial cues, and audio-alone) over four signal-to-noise ratios. The results indicated that: (1) visual cues can at times significantly improve comprehension scores, even with lip and facial cues not present; (2) visual cues are increasingly useful as noise is introduced; (3) visual cues assist the comprehension of certain grammatical types of verbal segments regardless of semantic content expressed in those type segments.
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