Gesture
Description
The received view in (psycho)linguistics, dialogue theory and gesture studies is
that co-verbal gestures, i.e. hand and arm movement, are part of the utterance and
contribute to its content (Kendon 1980; McNeill 1992). The relationships between
gesture and speech obey regularities that need to be defined in terms of not just the
relative timing of gesture to speech, but also the linguistic form of that speech: for
instance, prosody and syntactic constituency and headedness (Loehr 2007; Ebert
et al. 2011; Alahverdzhieva et al. 2017). Consequently, speech–gesture integration
is captured in grammar by means of a gesture-grammar interface. This chapter
provides basic snapshots from gesture research, reviews constraints on
speech–gesture integration and summarizes their implementations into HPSG frameworks.
Pointers to future developments conclude the exposition. Since there are already
a couple of overviews on gesture such as Özyürek (2012), Wagner et al. (2014) and
Abner et al. (2015), this chapter aims at distinguishing itself by providing a guided
tour of research that focuses on using (mostly) standard methods for semantic
composition in constraint-based grammars like HPSG to model gesture meanings.
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259-MüllerEtAl-2021-27.pdf
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Additional details
Related works
- Is part of
- 978-3-96110-255-6 (ISBN)
- 10.5281/zenodo.5543318 (DOI)