We have conducted three experimental studies in this project. In this section, I summarised the research purpose and the main result for each study. Note that we are still analysing data in the third study. Hence, I reported here the research purpose and the expected result.
First study: Neural integration of gesture and speech in children.
By using electrophysiological (EEG) measures that have previously provided evidence for adults' integration of gestures and speech we examined the online neurocognitive processing of gesture-speech integration in native Dutch-speaking 6-7-year-old children. We focused on N400 ERP component known to be modulated by semantic integration load. We created short video clips, where a speaker uttered a spoken action verb and simultaneously produced an iconic gesture representing actions. Each clip had two versions of matching or mismatching gesture-speech combinations which manipulated the semantic integration load. In the matching condition, the gesture and the verb conveyed the same information, whereas in the mismatching condition, they conveyed different information. The participants were instructed to attentively watch and listen to the clips and had a word-monitoring task occasionally. The event-related potentials (ERPs) time-locked to the speech onset showed that the amplitude of N400 was larger in the mismatching condition than in the matching condition-as previously found for adults and the effect showed a similar topography as well. This finding provides the first neural evidence that at the ages of 6-7, children' online processing of multimodal semantic information is comparable to that of adults.. This has implications for using gestures towards children in various educational and communicative settings.
Second study: The contribution of iconic gestures to degraded speech in children.
We often communicate in noisy situations such as classrooms, stations or living rooms. Research has shown that adult speakers often use hand gestures in such situations to effectively convey their messages, and listeners can use information from gestures to understand the degraded speech. However, little is known about to what extent gestures enhance children’s speech comprehension. To address this question, Dutch speaking adults and children aged 6 and 7 years were presented with a series of video clips, where an actor produced a Dutch verb with or without an iconic gesture. The speech signal was either clear, 4-, 8-, or 10-band noise vocoded speech. Results showed that children can benefit from gestures to disambiguate degraded speech as well as adults, but their performance did not arrive at adult level yet. For adults, the enhancement effect of gesture was greater in the 4-band condition than in the 8-band condition, whereas children showed the opposite pattern. It is argued that as children develop their language and cognitive skills, they can process degraded speech and use gesture information to disambiguate the speech.
Third study: Neurophysiological evidence of gesture enhancement effect on degraded speech in children and adults.
Study 1 found that children aged 6 and 7 years can integrate gesture and speech. But the stimuli used in the study was not high ecological validity in the sense that we do not come across gesture-speech mismatch expression in daily life.
It is no clear whether we still find similar children’s brain response If stimuli are higher ecological validity. Study 2 found that children’s accuracy score with gestures was lower than adult’s, but showed similar gesture enhancement effect at 8-band noise vocoding speech.
Thus, this third study aimed to see whether we find see similar neural process of gesture and degraded speech between children and adults by measuring EEG.