Communicative gestures in aphasia

Gestural communications of 10 mild and moderate aphasics and five controls were examined in two conditions: Face-to-face informal dyadic conversation and restricted visual access between speaker and listener. Gestural production was significantly reduced with restriction of visual access, supporting...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain and language 1986-03, Vol.27 (2), p.345-359
Hauptverfasser: Glosser, Guila, Wiener, Morton, Kaplan, Edith
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Gestural communications of 10 mild and moderate aphasics and five controls were examined in two conditions: Face-to-face informal dyadic conversation and restricted visual access between speaker and listener. Gestural production was significantly reduced with restriction of visual access, supporting the posited communicative function of the hand and arm gestures investigated in this study. No differences were found between aphasic and control subjects in the rate of gestural communication in the natural condition of face-to-face interaction. Moderate aphasics, however, were found to produce proportionally fewer of the complex semantic modifying and relational communicative gestures and more nonspecific, nonconsensually shared, unclear gestures. Gestural complexity was significantly negatively correlated with measures of linguistic impairment for the aphasics. The relationship between the frequency and complexity of communicative gestures and concurrent verbalizations was also examined. The findings of this study provide confirmation for the view that (1) there is an identifiable class of gestures utilized by aphasics for communication, (2) aphasics are impaired in their gestural communicative competence in natural conditions of communication, and (3) the quality of aphasics' gestural communications parallels changes in their verbal communication patterns.
ISSN:0093-934X
1090-2155
DOI:10.1016/0093-934X(86)90024-6