Susan Goldin-Meadow

Susan Goldin-Meadow

  • Title: Beardsley Ruml Distinguished Service Professor of Psychology, Comparative Human Development and the College
  • Education: PhD, University of Pennsylvania; MA, University of Pennsylvania; BA, Smith College
  • Joined UChicago faculty: 1981
  • sgm@uchicago.edu

Susan Goldin-Meadow

Susan Goldin-Meadow has done extensive research on how our hands help us talk and think. She discovered that deaf children whose hearing losses prevent them from learning spoken languages and whose hearing parents have not exposed them to sign language are not language-less. Despite their lack of linguistic input, these children use their hands to create their own gesture languages, called homesigns.

Prof. Goldin-Meadow also has found that individuals who are blind from birth gesture in much the same way that sighted people do, even though they’ve never seen anyone gesture. These gestures offer a unique window onto thought, often revealing cutting-edge knowledge that the gesturer is unable to express in speech. In recent work, she is finding that gesture not only reveals thought, but also plays an active role in changing thought––we can change our minds just by moving our hands.

She is currently the president of the Cognitive Development Society and the editor of the journal Language Learning and Development

Goldin-Meadow Stories

Math lessons with hand gestures teach kids flexible learning and ability to generalize skills

Study by UChicago researchers finds that children who use hand gestures gain deeper understanding of math concepts


Medical Daily

How hands do the talking

Linguists and psychologists team up to create the new Center for Gesture, Sign, and Language


UChicago

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Media Contacts

Elizabeth Braun Rush

Executive Director for Strategic Communications, Social Sciences Division

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Expertise

Children, Language, Gestures, Sign language