The purpose of the present study was to investigate co-speech gesture use during communication about pain. Speakers described
a recent pain experience and the data were analyzed using a ‘semantic feature approach’ to determine the distribution of information
across gesture and speech. This analysis revealed that a considerable proportion of pain-focused talk was accompanied by gestures,
and that these gestures often contained more information about pain than speech itself. Further, some gestures represented
information that was hardly represented in speech at all. Overall, these results suggest that gestures are integral to the
communication of pain and need to be attended to if recipients are to obtain a fuller understanding of the pain experience
and provide help and support to pain sufferers.
Keywords Pain communication – Co-speech gestures – Semantic feature analysis – Gesture–speech interaction