‘Wapper wat meer met je handen’

De invloed van gebaren op retentie en sprekerswaardering bij een informatieve presentatie

Journal Article (2019)
Author(s)

S. Baars (TU Delft - Instituut voor Talen en Academische Vaardigheden)

B.A. Andeweg (TU Delft - Instituut voor Talen en Academische Vaardigheden)

Department
Instituut voor Talen en Academische Vaardigheden
Copyright
© 2019 S. Baars, B.A. Andeweg
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.5117/TVT2019.1.001.BAAR
More Info
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Publication Year
2019
Language
Dutch
Copyright
© 2019 S. Baars, B.A. Andeweg
Department
Instituut voor Talen en Academische Vaardigheden
Issue number
1
Volume number
41
Pages (from-to)
3-17
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

To convey information during an oral presentation speakers not only use words, they also gesticulate. Their gestures can be divided into iconic, metaphoric, deictic and beat gestures (McNeill, 1992). Beats (repetitive, short movements) are frowned upon by some presentation skills advisers. Earlier research that focused on short speeches, mostly about concrete topological content, found that gestures help the listener to understand and remember the content. Presentation skills courses, however, focus on longer, more abstract informative speeches. To explore how gestures influence both retention and assessment of the speaker in such longer speeches, an experiment was conducted. Participants (N = 229) were asked to watch a fifteen minute informative presentation accompanied by PowerPoint slides, either (i) without gestures, (ii) with only beat gestures, or (iii) with a mix of iconic, metaphoric, deictic, and beat gestures. Participants were tested on retention and on their assessment of speaker qualities. An ANOVA showed a significant effect for retention. When a speaker accompanied his speech with only beat gestures, this resulted in higher scores than when this speaker remained in a static position. Also, when the speaker used only beat gestures, he was seen as more ‘natural’ than when he remained in a static position. These results do not imply causality. They may, however, temper advisers’ warnings against using beat gestures in presentations.

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