http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=with-a-wave-of-the-hand

With a wave of the hand
How using gestures can make you smarter

By Ellen Campana

Hand gestures help us think

Go into any busy coffee shop and you are likely to see people engrossed
in conversation, waving their hands around. A man at the counter
describes the coffee he wants to buy – in a mug, not a to-go cup – and
his hand takes a familiar shape, as if he were already holding the cozy
mug. Nearby, two sisters laugh, as one tells a story about a trip to the
barrier reef and all of the fish that she saw, her hands wiggling and
darting in an invisible sea in front of her. The drive to gesture when
speaking is fundamental to human nature.

If you have thought about why we gesture you probably assumed that we
gesture to help others understand what we are saying. Pretending to hold
a ceramic mug can help the barista understand exactly which mug you
want. Showing how the fish darted to and fro can help your sister get a
more vivid picture of what the reef looked like to you.

But might gesture also serve another purpose? Many scientists now think
that gestures can help the person making them -- that moving your hands
can help you think. Researchers have become increasingly interested in
the connection between the body and thought – in the ways that our
physical body shapes abstract mental processes. Gesture is at the center
of this discussion. Now the debate is moving into learning, with new
research on how students learn to solve math problems in the classroom.

To understand the research, consider a math problem like 3+2 +8 =___+8.
A student might make a “v” shape under the 2 and 3 with their pointer
finger and middle finger, as they try to understand the concept of
“grouping” – adding adjacent numbers together, a technique that can be
used to solve the problem. Previous research has shown that students who
are asked to gesture while talking about math problems are better at
learning how to do them. This is true whether the students are told what
gestures to make, or whether the gestures are spontaneous.

Now researchers are asking how. The new study -- by Dr. Susan
Goldin-Meadow and Zachary Mitchell of the University of Chicago, and Dr.
Susan Wagner-Cook of the University of Iowa – focused on third and
fourth graders solving a problem that required grouping. Students who
are coached to make the “v” gesture when solving a math problem like
3+2+8 = ___+8 learn how to solve the problem better. But students also
do a better job even if they were coached to make the “v” shape under
the wrong pair of numbers. The very act of making the “v” shape
introduces the concept of “grouping” to the student, through the body
itself.

But what, exactly, was the process that made this possible? During the
study, all of the students memorized the sentence “I want to make one
side equal to the other side.” They were then asked to say the sentence
out loud when they were give a problem to solve. The authors suggest
that students who also gestured attempted to make sense of both the
speech and gesture in a way that brought the two meanings together. This
process, they suggest, could crystallize the new concept of “grouping”
in the student’s mind.

The same process could occur in any situation where the person who is
speaking and gesturing is also trying to understand – be it remembering
details of a past event, or figuring out how to put together an Ikea shelf.

The study has important implications for the field of cognitive
psychology. Historically, the field has viewed concepts, the basic
elements of thought, as abstract representations that do not rely on the
physicality of the body. This notion, called Cartesian Dualism, is now
being challenged by another school of thought, called Embodied
Cognition. Embodied Cognition views concepts as bodily representations
with bases in perception, action and emotion. There is much evidence
supporting the Embodied Cognition view. However, until now there has
never been a detailed, experimentally supported account of how
embodiment through gesture plays a role in learning new concepts.

The study also has more practical implications for teaching, suggesting
that teachers can help students learn new concepts by teaching them
gestures.

The results from this study may not generalize directly to the gestures
you may see in your neighborhood coffeeshop. But the next time you are
in a conversation with a gesturing friend, it may be interesting to
ponder how those moving hands are subtly shaping her thoughts, as well
as yours.

Are you a scientist? Have you recently read a peer-reviewed paper that
you want to write about? Then contact Mind Matters co-editor Gareth
Cook, a Pulitzer prize-winning journalist at the Boston Globe, where he
edits the Sunday Ideas section.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR(S)
Ellen Campana is an Assistant Professor at Arizona State University with
joint appointments in the Department of Psychology and the School of
Art, Media and Engineering. Her research interests are embodiment and
the psychology of how people bring together sound and visual information
during everyday tasks.

-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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