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Original Articles

The Effects of Hand Gestures on Verbal Recall as a Function of High- and Low-Verbal-Skill Levels

Pages 137-147 | Received 20 Jul 2000, Accepted 18 Jun 2001, Published online: 30 Mar 2010
 

Abstract

The author examined the effects of cueing for verbal recall with the accompanying self-generated hand gestures as a function of verbal skill. There were 36 participants, half with low SAT verbal scores and half with high SAT verbal scores. Half of the participants of each verbal-skill level were cued for recall with their own gestures, and the remaining half was given a free-recall test. Cueing with self-generated gestures aided the low-verbal-skill participants so that their retrieval rate equaled that of the high-verbal-skill participants and their loss of recall over a 2-week period was minimal. This effect was stable for both concrete and abstract words. The findings support the hypothesis that gestures serve as an auxiliary code for memory retrieval.

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