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Vercellotti, Mary Lou – Sign Language Studies, 2022
Experience with a visual-spatial language may influence certain cognitive processes (Keehner and Gathercole 2007). Spatial ability is an important cognitive skill (Linn and Petersen 1985). Some research has found that deaf signers outperform hearing nonsigners on certain spatial tasks (e.g., Emmorey, Kosslyn, and Bellugi 1993) and that hearing…
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Spatial Ability
Massone, Maria Ignacia; Baez, Monica – Sign Language Studies, 2009
High illiteracy rates among the Argentine deaf population, even after long years of schooling, point to the need to revise certain approaches to deaf literacy, particularly in school settings. Qualitative change in deaf literacy requires the use of multiple conceptual tools if learners are to be able to tackle its complexity without reductionism…
Descriptors: Written Language, Sign Language, Deafness, Illiteracy
Peer reviewedVeinberg, Silvana C. – Sign Language Studies, 1993
Videotaped elicited short Spanish texts and free conversations from a 23-year-old deaf woman and a 57-year-old deaf man who used Argentine Sign Language (LSA) showed that negative statements generally included a negative manual sign. The sign DECIR-NO (SAY-NO) functions in LSA as an agreement negative verb. There also exists an affirmative…
Descriptors: Deafness, Negative Forms (Language), Nonverbal Communication, Sign Language
Peer reviewedMassone, Maria Ignacia; Johnson, Robert E. – Sign Language Studies, 1991
Contrasts the kinship terminology of Argentine Sign Language (LSA) with standard Spanish kinship terminology employed by nondeaf members in Argentine society. The combination of male and female terms and the frequency of reciprocal terms in LSA demonstrates that Argentine deaf society is culturally distinct in important ways from mainstream…
Descriptors: Cultural Differences, Deafness, Females, Foreign Countries

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