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Temporal Gestures in Different Temporal Perspectives

Abstract

Temporal perspectives have been studied as a part of spatial thinking of time. They allow us to place ourselves and temporal events on a timeline, making it easier to spatialize time. This study investigates how we adopt temporal perspectives in temporal gestures. We asked participants to retell temporal scenarios written in the Moving-Ego (ME), Moving-Time (MT), and Time-Reference-Point (Time-RP) perspectives in spontaneous and elicited gesture conditions. Participants adopted temporal perspectives similarly regardless of the gesture condition, with few differences. Our results showed that participants’ temporal gestures resonated better with the Ego-Reference-Point versus Time-Reference-Point distinction. Participants produced more ME and Time-RP gestures for the corresponding scenarios and speech, however the MT perspective was not adopted more than the others in any condition. Our findings show that we incorporate temporal perspectives into our temporal gestures to a considerable extent, however, the classical ME and MT classification may not hold for temporal gestures.

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