首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Evaluating Models of Gesture and Speech Production for People With Aphasia
Authors:Carola de Beer  Katharina Hogrefe  Martina Hielscher-Fastabend  Jan P. de Ruiter
Affiliation:1. Cognitive Sciences, Linguistics Department, University of Potsdam;2. Clinical Neuropsychology Research Group (EKN), Institute of Phonetics and Speech Processing, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München;3. Clinical Linguistics, Department of Linguistics and Literature Science, Bielefeld University;4. Departments of Psychology and Computer Science, Tufts University
Abstract:People with aphasia use gestures not only to communicate relevant content but also to compensate for their verbal limitations. The Sketch Model (De Ruiter, 2000) assumes a flexible relationship between gesture and speech with the possibility of a compensatory use of the two modalities. In the successor of the Sketch Model, the AR-Sketch Model (De Ruiter, 2017), the relationship between iconic gestures and speech is no longer assumed to be flexible and compensatory, but instead iconic gestures are assumed to express information that is redundant to speech. In this study, we evaluated the contradictory predictions of the Sketch Model and the AR-Sketch Model using data collected from people with aphasia as well as a group of people without language impairment. We only found compensatory use of gesture in the people with aphasia, whereas the people without language impairments made very little compensatory use of gestures. Hence, the people with aphasia gestured according to the prediction of the Sketch Model, whereas the people without language impairment did not. We conclude that aphasia fundamentally changes the relationship of gesture and speech.
Keywords:Aphasia  Gesture production  Model  Iconic gestures  Communication
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号