Multimodal Language in Child-Directed Versus Adult-Directed Speech

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Date

2024

Journal Title

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Volume Title

Publisher

SAGE Publications Ltd

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Green Open Access

No

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Abstract

Speakers design their multimodal communication according to the needs and knowledge of their interlocutors, phenomenon known as audience design. We use more sophisticated language (e.g., longer sentences with complex grammatical forms) when communicating with adults compared with children. This study investigates how speech and co-speech gestures change in adult-directed speech (ADS) versus child-directed speech (CDS) for three different tasks. Overall, 66 adult participants (Mage = 21.05, 60 female) completed three different tasks (story-reading, storytelling and address description) and they were instructed to pretend to communicate with a child (CDS) or an adult (ADS). We hypothesised that participants would use more complex language, more beat gestures, and less iconic gestures in the ADS compared with the CDS. Results showed that, for CDS, participants used more iconic gestures in the story-reading task and storytelling task compared with ADS. However, participants used more beat gestures in the storytelling task for ADS than CDS. In addition, language complexity did not differ across conditions. Our findings indicate that how speakers employ different types of gestures (iconic vs beat) according to the addressee’s needs and across different tasks. Speakers might prefer to use more iconic gestures with children than adults. Results are discussed according to audience design theory. © Experimental Psychology Society 2023.

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Keywords

adult-directed speech, Audience design, child-directed speech, multimodal language, child-directed speech, Adult, Gestures, multimodal language, Communication, Recipient Design, Audience design, Conversational Hand Gestures, Older-Adults, Preference, Motherese, Speakers, Speaking, Younger, Recall, Humans, Speech, Female, adult-directed speech, Language

Fields of Science

Citation

WoS Q

Q3

Scopus Q

Q3
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OpenCitations Citation Count
2

Source

Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology

Volume

77

Issue

4

Start Page

716

End Page

728
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CrossRef : 1

Scopus : 3

PubMed : 1

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Mendeley Readers : 6

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3

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3

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