Deaf children whose hearing losses are so severe that they cannot acquire spoken language and whose hearing parents have not exposed them to sign language nevertheless use gestures, called HOMESIGNS, to communicate. Homesigners have been shown to refer to entities by pointing at that entity (a demonstrative, that). They also use iconic gestures and category points that refer, not to a particular entity, but to its class (a noun, bird). We used longitudinal data from a homesigner called David to test the hypothesis that these different types of gestures are combined to form larger, multigesture nominal constituents (that bird). We verified this hypothesis by showing that David’s multigesture combinations served the same semantic and syntacti...
The paper examines the development of communicative competence in deaf children and its interactions...
For humans, the ability to communicate and use language is instantiated not only in the vocal modali...
Grammatical properties are found in conventional sign languages ofthe deaf and in unconventional ges...
Deaf children whose hearing losses prevent them from accessing spoken language and whose hearing par...
Combinatorial structure at both word and sentence levels is widely recognized as an important featur...
An essential function of human language is the ability to refer to information that is spatially and...
The ability to refer to objects or events that are not in the here and now is widely recognized as a...
The study examined whether deaf children's gesture systems are structured at the morpheme level...
Languages typically express semantic components of motion events such as manner (roll) and path (dow...
I focus here on how children construct communication, looking in particular at places where the lang...
Home sign systems are gestural communication systems that arise when a deaf child is deprived of man...
Utterances expressing generic kinds (“birds fly”) highlight qualities of a category that are stable ...
Variation in the linguistic use of handshapes exists across sign languages, but it is unclear how th...
British Sign Language (BSL) signers use a variety of structures, such as constructed action (CA), de...
British Sign Language (BSL) signers use a variety of structures, such as constructed action (CA), de...
The paper examines the development of communicative competence in deaf children and its interactions...
For humans, the ability to communicate and use language is instantiated not only in the vocal modali...
Grammatical properties are found in conventional sign languages ofthe deaf and in unconventional ges...
Deaf children whose hearing losses prevent them from accessing spoken language and whose hearing par...
Combinatorial structure at both word and sentence levels is widely recognized as an important featur...
An essential function of human language is the ability to refer to information that is spatially and...
The ability to refer to objects or events that are not in the here and now is widely recognized as a...
The study examined whether deaf children's gesture systems are structured at the morpheme level...
Languages typically express semantic components of motion events such as manner (roll) and path (dow...
I focus here on how children construct communication, looking in particular at places where the lang...
Home sign systems are gestural communication systems that arise when a deaf child is deprived of man...
Utterances expressing generic kinds (“birds fly”) highlight qualities of a category that are stable ...
Variation in the linguistic use of handshapes exists across sign languages, but it is unclear how th...
British Sign Language (BSL) signers use a variety of structures, such as constructed action (CA), de...
British Sign Language (BSL) signers use a variety of structures, such as constructed action (CA), de...
The paper examines the development of communicative competence in deaf children and its interactions...
For humans, the ability to communicate and use language is instantiated not only in the vocal modali...
Grammatical properties are found in conventional sign languages ofthe deaf and in unconventional ges...