This article reports on a linguistic study examining the use of real space blending in the tactile signed languages of Norwegian and Swedish signers who are both deaf and blind. Tactile signed languages are typically produced by interactants in contact with each other’s hands while signing. Of particular interest to this study are utterances which not only consist of the signer producing signs with his or her own hands (or other body parts), but which also recruit the other interactant’s hands (or another body part). These utterances, although perhaps less frequent, are co-constructed, in a very real sense, and they illustrate meaning construction during emerging, embodied discourse. Here, we analyze several examples of these types of utter...
Research has shown that spoken languages differ from each other in their representation of space. Us...
This article describes how deaf signers of Auslan (a deaf signed language of Australia) coordinate f...
Signers use their body and the space in front of them iconically. Does iconicity lead to the same ma...
Signed language users can draw on a range of articulators when expressing linguistic messages, inclu...
As humans, our ability to communicate and use language is instantiated not only in the vocal modalit...
This chapter describes how deaf-blind people regulate turn-taking in conversations when using tactil...
A fundamental difference between signed and spoken languages is that in signed languages the signer ...
For humans, the ability to communicate and use language is instantiated not only in the vocal modali...
This thesis comprises four separate studies of the same material: a ten-minute Swedish Sign Language...
The aim of the present study is to investigate the use of signing space, especially the potential re...
The present study focuses on turn-taking and questions in conversations between deaf-blind persons u...
International audiencePersonal transfers (often called Constructed Actions or role shifts, Metzger 1...
Tactile sign language is a variety of a national sign language. Tactile signing among persons with d...
Interlocutors participating in conversation collaborate with each other to coordinate their actions ...
For humans, the ability to communicate and use language is instantiated not only in the vocal modali...
Research has shown that spoken languages differ from each other in their representation of space. Us...
This article describes how deaf signers of Auslan (a deaf signed language of Australia) coordinate f...
Signers use their body and the space in front of them iconically. Does iconicity lead to the same ma...
Signed language users can draw on a range of articulators when expressing linguistic messages, inclu...
As humans, our ability to communicate and use language is instantiated not only in the vocal modalit...
This chapter describes how deaf-blind people regulate turn-taking in conversations when using tactil...
A fundamental difference between signed and spoken languages is that in signed languages the signer ...
For humans, the ability to communicate and use language is instantiated not only in the vocal modali...
This thesis comprises four separate studies of the same material: a ten-minute Swedish Sign Language...
The aim of the present study is to investigate the use of signing space, especially the potential re...
The present study focuses on turn-taking and questions in conversations between deaf-blind persons u...
International audiencePersonal transfers (often called Constructed Actions or role shifts, Metzger 1...
Tactile sign language is a variety of a national sign language. Tactile signing among persons with d...
Interlocutors participating in conversation collaborate with each other to coordinate their actions ...
For humans, the ability to communicate and use language is instantiated not only in the vocal modali...
Research has shown that spoken languages differ from each other in their representation of space. Us...
This article describes how deaf signers of Auslan (a deaf signed language of Australia) coordinate f...
Signers use their body and the space in front of them iconically. Does iconicity lead to the same ma...