Abstract
Parallel breakdown of gestures and speech following neurological damage supports the notion that ”... gestures and speech ... share a computational stage...” (McNeill, 1992) and emphasizes the role of neuropsychological approach for studying gestures. In this study patterns of conversational gestures were analysed in subjects with Alzheimer’s dementia, whose communicative performance indicated either primary lexical deficit or deficit in pragmatic/conceptual elaboration of discourse. Two gesture patterns were identified. The demented subjects with lexical deficit mostly produced iconic gestures which accompanied paraphasic expressions related to discriminating information. Conversely, the pragmatic/conceptual deficit corresponded to reduced production of iconic and increased production of deictic gestures. These findings indicate that the cognitive impairment underlying communicative deficit constrains the production of conversational gestures in brain-damaged patients. They also support the hypothesis that the early conceptual processes of speech production system play a central role in producing gestures.KeywordsIconic GestureDeictic GestureConceptual ElaborationGesture ProductionSpeech Production SystemThese keywords were added by machine and not by the authors. This process is experimental and the keywords may be updated as the learning algorithm improves.
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