We are happy to announce a talk by Sebastian Walter (GU Frankfurt) in the Semantics Colloquium.
The talk will take place on campus in IG 4.301.
Title: The at-issue status of character viewpoint gestures: An experimental investigation
Date: May 12
Time: 4 pm – 6 pm ct
Abstract:
Gestures can encode perspective, meaning that they can depict an event from different viewpoints (McNeill, 1992). More specifically, researchers have distinguished between character and observer viewpoint gestures (CVGs and OVGs, respectively). While CVGs depict events from a selected person’s point of view that participated in the event, OVGs depict events as if observed from a distance. Moreover, CVGs usually involve the whole body. OVGs, by contrast, are normally only produced with the hands.
In most formal semantic frameworks that model the semantic contribution of speech-accompanying gestures, it is claimed that they contribute not-at-issue meaning by default, i.e., they project and cannot be denied directly in discourse (Ebert & Ebert, 2014; Schlenker, 2018). This claim has been verified in an experimental study reported in...