Recent research into signed languages indicates that signs may share some properties with gesture, especially in the use of space in classifier constructions. A prediction of this proposal is that there will be similarities in the representation of motion events by sign-naive gesturers and by native signers of unrelated signed languages. This prediction is tested for deaf native signers of Australian Sign Language (Auslan), deaf signers of Taiwan Sign Language (TSL), and hearing nonsigners using the Verbs of Motion Production task from the Test Battery for American Sign Language (ASL) Morphology and Syntax. Results indicate that differences between the responses of nonsigners, Auslan signers, and TSL signers and the expected ASL responses a...
The focus of this work is on two types of handshapes: those that represent the object ( object hand...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 55-56), recorded video files in MOV and MP4 formats, 02:5...
International audienceLinguistic research reveals the need to consider linguistic diversity to bette...
Recent research into signed languages indicates that signs may share some properties with gesture, e...
Recent research into signed languages indicates that signs may share some properties with gesture, e...
Classifier constructions in sign languages, i.e. signed structures in which the articulator(s) expre...
There has long been interest in why languages are shaped the way they are, and in the relationship b...
This study reanalyzed motion capture data from 13 native American Sign Language (ASL) signers and 32...
This is the first kinematic investigation of articulator motion in Austrian Sign Language, which con...
Although classifier constructions generally aim for highly iconic depictions, like any other part of...
Sign languages used by deaf communities around the world possess the same structural and organizatio...
An ongoing issue of interest in second language research concerns what transfers from a speaker's fi...
The focus of this work is on the phonological variation across six sign languages in “classifier” co...
How do the signs of sign language differ from the gestures that speakers produce when they talk? We ...
Signers use their body and the space in front of them iconically. Does iconicity lead to the same ma...
The focus of this work is on two types of handshapes: those that represent the object ( object hand...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 55-56), recorded video files in MOV and MP4 formats, 02:5...
International audienceLinguistic research reveals the need to consider linguistic diversity to bette...
Recent research into signed languages indicates that signs may share some properties with gesture, e...
Recent research into signed languages indicates that signs may share some properties with gesture, e...
Classifier constructions in sign languages, i.e. signed structures in which the articulator(s) expre...
There has long been interest in why languages are shaped the way they are, and in the relationship b...
This study reanalyzed motion capture data from 13 native American Sign Language (ASL) signers and 32...
This is the first kinematic investigation of articulator motion in Austrian Sign Language, which con...
Although classifier constructions generally aim for highly iconic depictions, like any other part of...
Sign languages used by deaf communities around the world possess the same structural and organizatio...
An ongoing issue of interest in second language research concerns what transfers from a speaker's fi...
The focus of this work is on the phonological variation across six sign languages in “classifier” co...
How do the signs of sign language differ from the gestures that speakers produce when they talk? We ...
Signers use their body and the space in front of them iconically. Does iconicity lead to the same ma...
The focus of this work is on two types of handshapes: those that represent the object ( object hand...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 55-56), recorded video files in MOV and MP4 formats, 02:5...
International audienceLinguistic research reveals the need to consider linguistic diversity to bette...