Gesture Paves the Way for Language Development
University of Pittsburgh · University of Chicago
Abstract
In development, children often use gesture to communicate before they use words. The question is whether these gestures merely precede language development or are fundamentally tied to it. We examined 10 children making the transition from single words to two-word combinations and found that gesture had a tight relation to the children's lexical and syntactic development. First, a great many of the lexical items that each child produced initially in gesture later moved to that child's verbal lexicon. Second, children who were first to produce gesture-plus-word combinations conveying two elements in a proposition (point at bird and say "nap") were also first to produce two-word combinations ("bird nap").…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 18.43
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 23
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Gesture
- Lexicon
- Language development
- Psychology
- Word (group theory)
- Linguistics
- Nap
- Transition (genetics)
- Quality Education