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Talking with Your (Artificial) Hands: Communicative Hand Gestures as an Implicit Measure of Embodiment
When people talk, they move their hands to enhance meaning. Using accelerometry, we measured whether people spontaneously use their artificial limbs (prostheses) to gesture, and whether this behavior relates to everyday prosthesis use and perceived embodiment. Perhaps surprisingly, one- and two-hand...
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Published in: | iScience 2020-11, Vol.23 (11), p.101650-101650, Article 101650 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | When people talk, they move their hands to enhance meaning. Using accelerometry, we measured whether people spontaneously use their artificial limbs (prostheses) to gesture, and whether this behavior relates to everyday prosthesis use and perceived embodiment. Perhaps surprisingly, one- and two-handed participants did not differ in the number of gestures they produced in gesture-facilitating tasks. However, they did differ in their gesture profile. One-handers performed more, and bigger, gesture movements with their intact hand relative to their prosthesis. Importantly, one-handers who gestured more similarly to their two-handed counterparts also used their prosthesis more in everyday life. Although collectively one-handers only marginally agreed that their prosthesis feels like a body part, one-handers who reported they embody their prosthesis also showed greater prosthesis use for communication and daily function. Our findings provide the first empirical link between everyday prosthesis use habits and perceived embodiment and a novel means for implicitly indexing embodiment.
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•Daily prosthesis use associated with greater perceived prosthesis embodiment•Communicative gestures were applied as an implicit measure of embodiment•Individuals missing a hand gesture more with their intact hand relative to controls•Prosthesis gesture behavior relates to its daily functional use and embodiment
Human-Centered Computing; Social Sciences; Research Methodology Social Sciences |
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ISSN: | 2589-0042 2589-0042 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.isci.2020.101650 |