In face-to-face conversation, communicators orchestrate multimodal contributions that meaningfully combine the linguistic resources of spoken language and the visuo-spatial affordances of gesture. In this paper, we characterise this meaningful combination in terms of the COHERENCE of gesture and speech. Descriptive analyses illustrate the diverse ways gesture interpretation can supplement and extend the interpretation of prior gestures and accompanying speech. We draw certain parallels with the inventory of COHERENCE RELATIONS found in discourse between successive sentences. In both domains, we suggest, interlocutors make sense of multiple communicative actions in combination by using these coherence relations to link the actions’ interpretations into an intelligible whole. Descriptive analyses also emphasise the improvisation of gesture; the abstraction and generality of meaning in gesture allows communicators to interpret gestures in open-ended ways in new utterances and contexts. We draw certain parallels with interlocutors’ reasoning about underspecified linguistic meanings in discourse. In both domains, we suggest, coherence relations facilitate meaning-making by RESOLVING the meaning of each communicative act through constrained inference over information made salient in the prior discourse. Our approach to gesture interpretation lays the groundwork for formal and computational models that go beyond previous approaches based on compositional syntax and semantics, in better accounting for the flexibility and the constraints found in the interpretation of speech and gesture in conversation. At the same time, it shows that gesture provides an important source of evidence to sharpen the general theory of coherence in communication.
2023. Image–text coherence and its implications for multimodal AI. Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence 6
De Leon, Christian
2023. Pointing to communicate: the discourse function and semantics of rich demonstration. Linguistics and Philosophy 46:4 ► pp. 839 ff.
Francis, Naomi, Patrick Georg Grosz & Pritty Patel-Grosz
2023. THROW. Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 8:1
Greenberg, Gabriel
2023. The Iconic-Symbolic Spectrum. Philosophical Review 132:4 ► pp. 579 ff.
Gregori, Alina, Federica Amici, Ingmar Brilmayer, Aleksandra Ćwiek, Lennart Fritzsche, Susanne Fuchs, Alexander Henlein, Oliver Herbort, Frank Kügler, Jens Lemanski, Katja Liebal, Andy Lücking, Alexander Mehler, Kim Tien Nguyen, Wim Pouw, Pilar Prieto, Patrick Louis Rohrer, Paula G. Sánchez-Ramón, Martin Schulte-Rüther, Petra B. Schumacher, Stefan R. Schweinberger, Volker Struckmeier, Patrick C. Trettenbrein & Celina I. von Eiff
2023. A Roadmap for Technological Innovation in Multimodal Communication Research. In Digital Human Modeling and Applications in Health, Safety, Ergonomics and Risk Management [Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 14029], ► pp. 402 ff.
Grosz, Patrick Georg, Gabriel Greenberg, Christian De Leon & Elsi Kaiser
2023. A semantics of face emoji in discourse. Linguistics and Philosophy 46:4 ► pp. 905 ff.
Lelandais, Manon & Gabriel Thiberge
2023. The role of prosody and hand gestures in the perception of boundaries in speech✰. Speech Communication 150 ► pp. 41 ff.
Lücking, Andy & Jonathan Ginzburg
2023. Leading voices: dialogue semantics, cognitive science and the polyphonic structure of multimodal interaction. Language and Cognition 15:1 ► pp. 148 ff.
Patel-Grosz, Pritty, Salvador Mascarenhas, Emmanuel Chemla & Philippe Schlenker
2023. Super Linguistics: an introduction. Linguistics and Philosophy 46:4 ► pp. 627 ff.
Schlenker, Philippe
2023. On the typology of iconic contributions. Theoretical Linguistics 49:3-4 ► pp. 269 ff.
Laparle, Schuyler
2021. Tracking Discourse Topics in Co-speech Gesture. In Digital Human Modeling and Applications in Health, Safety, Ergonomics and Risk Management. Human Body, Motion and Behavior [Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 12777], ► pp. 233 ff.
Pustejovsky, James & Nikhil Krishnaswamy
2021. The Role of Embodiment and Simulation in Evaluating HCI: Theory and Framework. In Digital Human Modeling and Applications in Health, Safety, Ergonomics and Risk Management. Human Body, Motion and Behavior [Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 12777], ► pp. 288 ff.
Lelandais, Manon
2020. Modelling the interpretative impact of subordinate constructions in spontaneous conversation. Corela :18-2
Van Boening, Angela M. & Eric M. Riggs
2020. Geologic gestures: A new classification for embodied cognition in geology. Journal of Geoscience Education 68:1 ► pp. 49 ff.
Hunter, Julie
2019. Relating gesture to speech: reflections on the role of conditional presuppositions. Linguistics and Philosophy 42:4 ► pp. 317 ff.
Alikhani, Malihe & Matthew Stone
2018. 2018 IEEE Conference on Multimedia Information Processing and Retrieval (MIPR), ► pp. 272 ff.
MORETT, LAURA M.
2018. In hand and in mind: Effects of gesture production and viewing on second language word learning. Applied Psycholinguistics 39:2 ► pp. 355 ff.
2015. Meaning and Demonstration. Review of Philosophy and Psychology 6:1 ► pp. 69 ff.
DeVault, David & Matthew Stone
2014. Pursuing and demonstrating understanding in dialogue. In Natural Language Generation in Interactive Systems, ► pp. 34 ff.
Kendon, Adam
2014. Semiotic diversity in utterance production and the concept of ‘language’. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 369:1651 ► pp. 20130293 ff.
Kendon, Adam
2024. Contributions to the Study of Visible Action as Utterance: A Fifty-Year Retrospective. In The Cambridge Handbook of Gesture Studies, ► pp. 133 ff.
Lelandais, Manon & Gaëlle Ferré
2014. Multimodal Analysis of Parentheticals in Conversational Speech. Multimodal Communication 3:2
Lelandais, Manon & Gaëlle Ferré
2017. How Are Three Syntactic Types of Subordinate Clauses Different in Terms of Informational Weight?. Anglophonia :23
Stojnic, Una, Matthew Stone & Ernie Lepore
2013. DEIXIS (EVEN WITHOUT POINTING)*. Philosophical Perspectives 27:1 ► pp. 502 ff.
[no author supplied]
2020. Linguistic Fundamentals for Natural Language Processing II [Synthesis Lectures on Human Language Technologies, ],
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