EXPRESS: Individual Differences in Representational Gesture Production Are Associated with Cognitive and Empathy Skills

Feride Canarslan* (Corresponding Author), Mingyuan Chu

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Substantial individual variation exists in the frequency of gestures produced while speaking. This study investigated the associations between cognitive abilities, empathy levels, and personality traits with the frequency of representational gestures. A cartoon narration task and a social dilemma solving task were used to elicit gestures. Predictor variables were selected based on prior research on individual differences in gesture production and the cognitive and communicative functions of gestures in speech. Our findings revealed that an increased frequency of representational gestures was associated with higher empathy levels in the cartoon narration task. However, in the social dilemma solving task, a higher frequency of representational gestures was associated with lower visuospatial working memory, spatial transformation, and inhibition control abilities. Moreover, no significant relationships were found between verbal working memory, personality traits, and the frequency of representational gestures in either task. These findings suggested that predictor variables for representational gesture production vary depending on the nature of the gesture elicitation task (e.g., spatiomotoric vs. abstract topics). Future research should examine the relationship between individuals’ cognitive abilities, empathy and gesture production with across a broader range of topics and in more ecologically valid contexts.
Original languageEnglish
JournalQuarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
Early online date26 Mar 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 26 Mar 2024

Keywords

  • representational gesture
  • visuospatial working memory
  • spatial transformation
  • inhibition control
  • empathy

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