A well-established literature reveals that a speaker's gestures have beneficial effects on the listener's memory for speech. A main assumption of our investigation is that gestures improve memory through the exploitation of the listener's motor system. We tested this prediction in four experiments in which the participants listened to action sentences uttered by a speaker who either stayed still or accompanied the speech with congruent gestureS. The results revealed that when the listeners observed gestures their memory for speech improved (Experiment 1), but loading up the listeners' motor system during gestures observation cancelled the beneficial effect when the motor task involved the same effectors used by the speaker (arms and hands, Experiments 2-3). The beneficial effect of gestures persisted when the motor task involved different effectors (legs and feet, Experiment 4). These results support the assumption of a main involvement of the motor system in the beneficial effect of observed gestures.

Mechanisms underlying the beneficial effect of a speaker’s gestures on the listener

IANI', FRANCESCO;BUCCIARELLI, Monica
2017-01-01

Abstract

A well-established literature reveals that a speaker's gestures have beneficial effects on the listener's memory for speech. A main assumption of our investigation is that gestures improve memory through the exploitation of the listener's motor system. We tested this prediction in four experiments in which the participants listened to action sentences uttered by a speaker who either stayed still or accompanied the speech with congruent gestureS. The results revealed that when the listeners observed gestures their memory for speech improved (Experiment 1), but loading up the listeners' motor system during gestures observation cancelled the beneficial effect when the motor task involved the same effectors used by the speaker (arms and hands, Experiments 2-3). The beneficial effect of gestures persisted when the motor task involved different effectors (legs and feet, Experiment 4). These results support the assumption of a main involvement of the motor system in the beneficial effect of observed gestures.
2017
96
110
121
Gestures,Memory for action,Mental models,Motor system,Experimenter-performed task
Ianì, F.; Bucciarelli, M.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1641206
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