This study explores the use of deictic gestures, vocalizations and words compared to content-loaded, or representational gestures and words in children’s early one- and two-element utterances. We analyze the spontaneous production of four children, observed longitudinally from 10–12 to 24–25 months of age, focusing on the components of children’s utterances (deictic vs. representational), the information encoded, and the temporal relationship between gestures and vocalizations or words that were produced in combination. Results indicate that while the gestural and vocal modalities are meaningfully and temporally integrated form the earliest stages, deictic and representational elements are unevenly distributed in the gestural vs. the vocal ...
Whether language/gesture correlations inearly language development can be explained by parallel-ism ...
AbstractThis study explores the communicative production of gestural and vocal modalities by 8 norma...
ABSTRACT—In development, children often use gesture to communicate before they use words. The questi...
The study explores the use of deictic gestures, vocalizations and words compared to content-loaded, ...
This study explores the interplay between gestures and words in the early vocabu-laries of 12 normal...
Both vocalization and gesture are universal modes of communication and fundamental features of langu...
This paper investigates the social-cognitive and motivational complexities underlying prelinguistic ...
This study explores the communicative production of gestural and vocal modalities by 8 normally deve...
Standard approaches to child phonology have typically assumed that young children first master a rep...
Deictic gestures have important role in human communication in general and also in prelinguistic com...
none4In typical development (TD), gestures support the building of meanings and convey them in combi...
This study provides new longitudinal evidence on two major types of gesture- speech combination that...
Contains fulltext : 106953.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)Radboud Univers...
The aim of this study is to analyze the relationship between rhythmic movements and deictic gestures...
This study explores the patterns of gesture and speech combinations from the babbling period to the ...
Whether language/gesture correlations inearly language development can be explained by parallel-ism ...
AbstractThis study explores the communicative production of gestural and vocal modalities by 8 norma...
ABSTRACT—In development, children often use gesture to communicate before they use words. The questi...
The study explores the use of deictic gestures, vocalizations and words compared to content-loaded, ...
This study explores the interplay between gestures and words in the early vocabu-laries of 12 normal...
Both vocalization and gesture are universal modes of communication and fundamental features of langu...
This paper investigates the social-cognitive and motivational complexities underlying prelinguistic ...
This study explores the communicative production of gestural and vocal modalities by 8 normally deve...
Standard approaches to child phonology have typically assumed that young children first master a rep...
Deictic gestures have important role in human communication in general and also in prelinguistic com...
none4In typical development (TD), gestures support the building of meanings and convey them in combi...
This study provides new longitudinal evidence on two major types of gesture- speech combination that...
Contains fulltext : 106953.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)Radboud Univers...
The aim of this study is to analyze the relationship between rhythmic movements and deictic gestures...
This study explores the patterns of gesture and speech combinations from the babbling period to the ...
Whether language/gesture correlations inearly language development can be explained by parallel-ism ...
AbstractThis study explores the communicative production of gestural and vocal modalities by 8 norma...
ABSTRACT—In development, children often use gesture to communicate before they use words. The questi...