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Co-speech gestures influence the magnitude and stability of articulatory movements: Evidence for coupling-based enhancement

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Abstract Humans rarely speak without producing co-speech gestures of the hands, head, and other parts of the body. Co-speech gestures are also highly restricted in how they are timed with speech, typically synchronizing with prosodically-prominent syllables. What functional principles underlie this relationship? Here, we examine how the production of co-speech manual gestures influences spatiotemporal patterns of the oral articulators during speech production. We provide novel evidence that co-speech gestures induce more extreme tongue and jaw displacement and that they contribute to greater temporal stability of oral articulatory movements. This effect–which we term coupling enhancement–differs from stress-based hyperarticulation in that differences in articulatory magnitude are not vowel-specific in their patterning. Speech and gesture synergies therefore constitute an independent variable to consider when modeling the effects of prosodic prominence on articulatory patterns. Our results are consistent with work in language acquisition and speech-motor control suggesting that synchronizing speech to gesture can entrain acoustic prominence.
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Title: Co-speech gestures influence the magnitude and stability of articulatory movements: Evidence for coupling-based enhancement
Description:
Abstract Humans rarely speak without producing co-speech gestures of the hands, head, and other parts of the body.
Co-speech gestures are also highly restricted in how they are timed with speech, typically synchronizing with prosodically-prominent syllables.
What functional principles underlie this relationship? Here, we examine how the production of co-speech manual gestures influences spatiotemporal patterns of the oral articulators during speech production.
We provide novel evidence that co-speech gestures induce more extreme tongue and jaw displacement and that they contribute to greater temporal stability of oral articulatory movements.
This effect–which we term coupling enhancement–differs from stress-based hyperarticulation in that differences in articulatory magnitude are not vowel-specific in their patterning.
Speech and gesture synergies therefore constitute an independent variable to consider when modeling the effects of prosodic prominence on articulatory patterns.
Our results are consistent with work in language acquisition and speech-motor control suggesting that synchronizing speech to gesture can entrain acoustic prominence.

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