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Age-related differences in multimodal recipient design: younger, but not older adults, adapt speech and co-speech gestures to common ground

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posted on 2018-10-05, 05:48 authored by Louise Schubotz, Aslı Özyürek, Judith Holler

Speakers can adapt their speech and co-speech gestures based on knowledge shared with an addressee (common ground-based recipient design). Here, we investigate whether these adaptations are modulated by the speaker’s age and cognitive abilities. Younger and older participants narrated six short comic stories to a same-aged addressee. Half of each story was known to both participants, the other half only to the speaker. The two age groups did not differ in terms of the number of words and narrative events mentioned per narration, or in terms of gesture frequency, gesture rate, or percentage of events expressed multimodally. However, only the younger participants reduced the amount of verbal and gestural information when narrating mutually known as opposed to novel story content. Age-related differences in cognitive abilities did not predict these differences in common ground-based recipient design. The older participants’ communicative behaviour may therefore also reflect differences in social or pragmatic goals.

Funding

This work was supported by a fellowship by the Max Planck International Research Network on Aging (MaxNetAging), the Max Planck Gesellschaft, and the European Research Council (Advanced Grant #269484 INTERACT awarded to S. C. Levinson).

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    Language Cognition and Neuroscience

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