Pointing
Contexts and instrumentality
Although long heralded as a human species-unique gesture, pointing has now been demonstrated in numerous species of non-human animals. Many contemporary researchers argue that pointing for instrumental ends marks a different kind of psychological process from pointing to share attention as an end in itself. Thus, a large body of contemporary theory is built on presumptions about the hypothetical motivations underlying pointing. I will briefly outline some of the contexts and motivations in which humans point, and argue that virtually all human pointing can be interpreted in instrumental terms. If this is correct, then instrumentality, per se, cannot illuminate the evolutionary origins of joint attention.
Cited by
Cited by 6 other publications
Bard, Kim A., Sophie Dunbar, Vanessa Maguire-Herring, Yvette Veira, Kathryn G. Hayes & Kelly McDonald
2014.
Gestures and social-emotional communicative development in chimpanzee infants.
American Journal of Primatology 76:1
► pp. 14 ff.

Leavens, David A.
2014.
The Plight of the Sense-Making Ape. In
Enactive Cognition at the Edge of Sense-Making,
► pp. 81 ff.

2021.
The Referential Problem Space revisited: An ecological hypothesis of the evolutionary and developmental origins of pointing.
WIREs Cognitive Science 12:4

Leavens, David A., Lisa A. Reamer, Mary Catherine Mareno, Jamie L. Russell, Daniel Wilson, Steven J. Schapiro & William D. Hopkins
2015.
Distal Communication by Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes): Evidence for Common Ground?.
Child Development 86:5
► pp. 1623 ff.

McCune, Lorraine, Elizabeth M. Lennon & Anne Greenwood
2021.
Gestures, grunts, and words: Development in a dynamic system.
First Language 41:3
► pp. 243 ff.

Racine, Timothy P., Tyler J. Wereha, Olga Vasileva, Donna Tafreshi & Joseph J. Thompson
2014.
The Evolution of Joint Attention: A Review and Critique. In
The Evolution of Social Communication in Primates [
Interdisciplinary Evolution Research, 1],
► pp. 127 ff.

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