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Is the Communication Pyramid a useful Model of Language Development?
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Reviewing the quality of discourse information measures in aphasia
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Reviewing the Quality of Discourse Information Measures in Aphasia
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24 |
A pilot study exploring public awareness and knowledge of right hemisphere communication disorder compared with aphasia and stroke in Northwest London, UK
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Viva Survivors – the effect of peer-mentoring on pre-viva anxiety in early-years students
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Exploration of older and younger British adults' performance on The Awareness of Social Inference Test (TASIT)
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27 |
Language and iconic gesture use in procedural discourse by speakers with aphasia
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29 |
“TOT” phenomena: Gesture production in younger and older adults
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30 |
The role of semantically rich gestures in aphasic conversation
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To the sentence and beyond: a single case therapy report for mild aphasia
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The role of semantically rich gestures in aphasic conversation
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Language and Iconic Gesture Use in Procedural Discourse by Speakers with Aphasia
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Abstract:
Background: Conveying instructions is an everyday use of language, and gestures are likely to be a key feature of this. Although co-speech iconic gestures are tightly integrated with language, and people with aphasia (PWA) produce procedural discourses impaired at a linguistic level, no previous studies have investigated how PWA use co-speech iconic gestures in these contexts. Aims: This study investigated how speakers with aphasia communicated meaning using gesture and language in procedural discourses, compared with neurologically healthy speakers. We aimed to identify the relative relationship of gesture and speech, in the context of impaired language, both overall and in individual events. Methods and Procedures: Twenty nine people with aphasia (PWA) and 29 neurologically healthy control participants (NHP) produced two procedural discourses. The structure and semantic content of language of the whole discourses were analysed through predicate argument structure and spatial motor terms; and gestures were analysed for frequency and semantic form. Gesture and language were analysed in two key events, to determine the relative information presented in each modality. Outcomes and Results: PWA and NHP used similar frequencies and forms of gestures, although PWA used syntactically simpler language and fewer spatial words. This meant overall, relatively more information was present in PWA gesture. This finding was also reflected in the key events, where PWA used gestures conveying rich semantic information alongside semantically impoverished language more often than NHP.
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Keyword:
P Philology. Linguistics
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URL: https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/4877/1/%28in%20press%29%20Pritchard%20Dipper%20Morgan%20and%20Cocks.pdf https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/4877/ https://doi.org/10.1080/02687038.2014.993912
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A pilot study exploring public awareness and knowledge of right hemisphere communication disorder compared with aphasia and stroke in Northwest London, UK
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37 |
Verb use in aphasic and non-aphasic personal discourse: What is normal?
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38 |
Die Funktion semantisch reicher Gesten im Gespraech bei Aphasie
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39 |
The use of semantically rich gestures in aphasic conversation
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