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gesticulations

Gesticulation is the act of making deliberate movements, especially with the hands, arms, or entire body, to convey information, emphasis, or emotion. Gesticulations often accompany speech or thought, providing nonverbal cues that clarify meaning, reflect attitude, or regulate interaction. The term covers a broad range of spontaneous movements beyond formal sign languages.

In everyday communication, gesticulations include co-speech gestures that accompany spoken language. They can be emblematic gestures

Functions include aiding recall and lexical access, illustrating information that is difficult to express in words,

Cultural, social, and individual factors shape gesticulation. Norms vary across cultures in terms of frequency, amplitude,

Research in linguistics, psychology, and anthropology studies gesticulations as part of multimodal communication. Methods include observational

with
conventional
meanings
(such
as
a
thumbs-up
or
a
wave),
iconic
gestures
that
depict
shapes
or
actions,
deictic
gestures
that
point
to
people
or
objects,
and
beat
gestures
that
align
with
speech
rhythm
and
emphasis.
signaling
confidence
or
uncertainty,
and
helping
to
manage
turn-taking
in
conversations.
Gesticulations
can
also
reveal
cognitive
load
or
affect
how
listeners
perceive
credibility
and
engagement.
and
acceptability;
gender,
age,
and
context
influence
use;
misinterpretations
can
arise
in
cross-cultural
interactions.
In
performance
arts
and
media,
intentional
gesticulation
is
employed
for
expression
and
characterization.
coding,
motion
capture,
and
analysis
of
gesture-speech
alignment.
Applications
appear
in
education,
human-computer
interaction,
and
animation,
where
animating
natural-looking
gesticulations
improves
realism
and
intelligibility.