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題名 Do gestures compensate for the omission of motion expression in speech?
作者 Chui, Kawai
徐嘉慧
貢獻者 英文系
關鍵詞 gestural compensation; gesture; linguistic-imagistic representation; motion event; cross-linguistic representation
日期 2011-12
上傳時間 10-Sep-2012 11:34:29 (UTC+8)
摘要 The present study investigates whether and to what extent motion-event gestures compensate for the omission of linguistic expression in Chinese discourse and across different languages to understand language-specificity/language-universality and the coordination of motion information across the two modalities. The Chinese conversational and narrative data consistently show that manner fog (i.e., manner absent from speech but present in gesture) was not found. Chinese speakers also demonstrate a preference for compensation — gestures tend to compensate for the lack of path content in speaking. These results differ from those for English and Turkish which do not prefer path gestures in manner-only clauses. The cross-linguistic variation provides evidence for language specificity in gestural compensation. The language-specific coordination of information in speech and gesture suggests Chinese speakers’ habitual focus of attention on PATH in multimodal communication
關聯 Chinese Language and Discourse, 2(2), 153-167
資料類型 article
dc.contributor 英文系en
dc.creator (作者) Chui, Kawaien
dc.creator (作者) 徐嘉慧zh_TW
dc.date (日期) 2011-12-
dc.date.accessioned 10-Sep-2012 11:34:29 (UTC+8)-
dc.date.available 10-Sep-2012 11:34:29 (UTC+8)-
dc.date.issued (上傳時間) 10-Sep-2012 11:34:29 (UTC+8)-
dc.identifier.uri (URI) http://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/53547-
dc.description.abstract (摘要) The present study investigates whether and to what extent motion-event gestures compensate for the omission of linguistic expression in Chinese discourse and across different languages to understand language-specificity/language-universality and the coordination of motion information across the two modalities. The Chinese conversational and narrative data consistently show that manner fog (i.e., manner absent from speech but present in gesture) was not found. Chinese speakers also demonstrate a preference for compensation — gestures tend to compensate for the lack of path content in speaking. These results differ from those for English and Turkish which do not prefer path gestures in manner-only clauses. The cross-linguistic variation provides evidence for language specificity in gestural compensation. The language-specific coordination of information in speech and gesture suggests Chinese speakers’ habitual focus of attention on PATH in multimodal communicationen
dc.language zh_TWen
dc.language.iso en_US-
dc.relation (關聯) Chinese Language and Discourse, 2(2), 153-167en
dc.subject (關鍵詞) gestural compensation; gesture; linguistic-imagistic representation; motion event; cross-linguistic representationen
dc.title (題名) Do gestures compensate for the omission of motion expression in speech?en
dc.type (資料類型) articleen