An essential function of human language is the ability to refer to information that is spatially and temporally displaced from the location of the speaker and the listener, that is, displaced reference. This article describes the development of this function in 4 deaf children who were not exposed to a usable conventional language model and communicated via idiosyncratic gesture systems, called homesign, and in 18 hearing children who were acquiring English as a native language. Although the deaf children referred to the nonpresent much less frequently and at later ages than the hearing children, both groups followed a similar developmental path, adding increasingly abstract categories of displaced reference to their repertoires in the same...
In the written Dutch of many deaf children (and adults) there seem to be traces of Flemish Belgian S...
Previous research has shown that spatial language is sensitive to the effects of delayed language ex...
In the current debate about the emergence of language, researchers have looked for various sources o...
The ability to refer to objects or events that are not in the here and now is widely recognized as a...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 233-250) and indexes.Pt. I. The problem of language-learn...
Deaf children whose hearing losses are so severe that they cannot acquire spoken language and whose ...
Do children come to the language-learning situation with a predetermined set of ideas about motion e...
The paper examines the development of communicative competence in deaf children and its interactions...
Deaf children whose hearing losses prevent them from accessing spoken language and whose hearing par...
I focus here on how children construct communication, looking in particular at places where the lang...
Languages typically express semantic components of motion events such as manner (roll) and path (dow...
In the debate about language evolution, the fact that there is no direct evidence about the emergenc...
Understanding how a language expresses the existence and action of an entity represents a critical j...
There are at least two languages (American Sign Language [ASL], English) and three modalities (sign,...
International audienceBased on her observation of two deaf children acquiring American Sign Language...
In the written Dutch of many deaf children (and adults) there seem to be traces of Flemish Belgian S...
Previous research has shown that spatial language is sensitive to the effects of delayed language ex...
In the current debate about the emergence of language, researchers have looked for various sources o...
The ability to refer to objects or events that are not in the here and now is widely recognized as a...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 233-250) and indexes.Pt. I. The problem of language-learn...
Deaf children whose hearing losses are so severe that they cannot acquire spoken language and whose ...
Do children come to the language-learning situation with a predetermined set of ideas about motion e...
The paper examines the development of communicative competence in deaf children and its interactions...
Deaf children whose hearing losses prevent them from accessing spoken language and whose hearing par...
I focus here on how children construct communication, looking in particular at places where the lang...
Languages typically express semantic components of motion events such as manner (roll) and path (dow...
In the debate about language evolution, the fact that there is no direct evidence about the emergenc...
Understanding how a language expresses the existence and action of an entity represents a critical j...
There are at least two languages (American Sign Language [ASL], English) and three modalities (sign,...
International audienceBased on her observation of two deaf children acquiring American Sign Language...
In the written Dutch of many deaf children (and adults) there seem to be traces of Flemish Belgian S...
Previous research has shown that spatial language is sensitive to the effects of delayed language ex...
In the current debate about the emergence of language, researchers have looked for various sources o...