Sotaro Kita’s scientific contributions

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Figure 1. Imitated gesture produced by William at age 22 months (Line Number 669) depicting a triangle by holding together the index fingers and thumbs of both hands. The child says, "Triangle" with the gesture
Figure 5. Example of a tracing gesture depicting shape produced in response to an adult's request by Violet at age 22 months (Line Number 106) to depict "crescent" by moving her right fist along and up in a slight arc. The child says "moon?" with the gesture. The arrow indicates the direction of movement of the right hand during the gesture
Figure 6. Example of an imagined object, transitive action gesture produced in response to an adult's verbal label by Naima at age 12 months (Line Number 183) to depict "splash" by raising her arms and bringing two flat palms down quickly onto the surface of the book in the mother's lap. Naima does not say anything with the gesture. The two arrows indicate the direction of movement of each hand during the gesture with dotted lines indicating movement concealed by Naima's body
Figure 7. Example of an intransitive action gesture that is semantically related to the conversational context, produced by Lily at age 24 months (Line Number 617) to depict "scratchy beard" by stroking her right cheek with her left hand in a fist shape. Lily says "Daddy's very scratchy" with the gesture. The double-headed arrow indicates the direction of movement of the left hand during the gesture
Summary of definitions of iconic gestures used in different studies

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Infants can create iconic gestures during natural interactions with caregivers
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January 2025

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106 Reads

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1 Citation

Gesture

Kirsty R. Green

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Chloe Osei-Cobbina

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Sotaro Kita

Adults across cultures produce iconic gestures, but little is known about the emergence of iconic gesturing in infants. This study aimed to identify plausible instances of infants’ earliest iconic gestures to learn more about their form and the interactional contexts in which they emerge. We identified the first 10 iconic gestures produced by five English-speaking children in a naturalistic longitudinal video corpus. In identifying gestures, we cast a wide net that included gestures produced during pretend play and those performed with objects in-hand. Analyses of gestures’ form and context show that children produced their first iconic gesture between 12 and 20 months, the great majority of which depicted actions. We found mixed evidence suggesting that children may produce conceptually less-challenging gestures earlier. Infants produced more object-in-hand gestures than empty-hand gestures to depict transitive actions but also more imagined-object than body-part-as-object gestures. Most gestures were produced independently of adult models, and many demonstrated innovation. Overall, within natural interactions, infants demonstrated impressive representational abilities and did not always rely on parental scaffolding. Our findings highlight the importance of considering the interactional context when conducting research on the development of gesture.

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