# Variation in Interactive Gestures by Visual Occlusion and Topic Complexity: Evidence for a Subconscious Theory of Gesture

**Authors:** T. R. Williamson, Kristofer Kinsey, Anna E. Piasecki

PMC · DOI: 10.1111/cogs.70195 · 2026-03-10

## TL;DR

The study explores how gestures change with visual occlusion and conversation complexity, suggesting subconscious motivations for gesturing.

## Contribution

The paper introduces a new perspective on gesture function by analyzing interactive gestures in naturalistic conversations.

## Key findings

- Occluding gesture visibility significantly decreases interactive gestures during simple conversations.
- Interactive gestures account for nearly 90% of uncodeable gestures and a quarter of all gestures.
- Complex topic conversations maintain stable interactive gesture frequency even when gestures are occluded.

## Abstract

Gestures are often categorized into types: iconics, metaphorics, and pantomimes (having representational relationships with spoken semantics), deictics (i.e., pointing), emblems (having their own conventional meaning), and beats (temporally coinciding with spoken content for emphasis). These originate from research often involving unnaturalistic paradigms where participants’ gestures during responses (e.g., retelling a narrative) are recorded. Approaching these types implicitly requires a stance on why we gesture; a conscious aim to communicate or an unconscious effort to orchestrate speech. Focus on them has led to the understudying of the interactive role gestures can play, where intersubjective acknowledgment and information transfer are central. This paper has two main aims: to profile the interactive role of gesturing as a proportion of all gesturing and to investigate its relevance for why humans gesture. We report data from 48 28‐min dyadic conversations with a naïve participant and a confederate, varying interlocutors’ gesture visibility and conversation complexity. Our first, preregistered, analysis coded for the six traditional gesture categories, which resulted in ∼28% being uncodeable. Our second analysis asked whether these were interactive, which accounted for nearly 90% of uncoded gestures and a quarter of the entire database. Occluding gesture visibility significantly decreased the amount of interactive gestures participants made, resulting from a drop in interactive gestures made during simple conversations; complex topic interactive gesture frequency is stable between visually available and occluded conditions. Our data support both philosophies, but advocate for a subconscious account: that we gesture for the intrinsic motivations to express ourselves and to be understood.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** stroke (MESH:D020521), Death (MESH:D003643)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12976465/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12976465