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Rowe, Jacqueline – Special Education: Forward Trends, 1981
The Paget-Gorman Sign System, a signed English approach shown to be effective with deaf or hard of hearing children, has been helpful in developing phrase structure in hearing impaired mentally retarded students. (CL)
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Hearing Impairments, Mental Retardation, Multiple Disabilities
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Luftig, Richard L.; Lloyd, Lyle L. – Sign Language Studies, 1981
Investigates sign learning as a function of sign translucency (ease of relating a sign to its referents) and referential concreteness. Naive sign learners attempted to learn a list of sign-referent pairs. Signs high in translucency and referents high in concreteness facilitated learning; low levels of each variable inhibited learning. (Author/PJM)
Descriptors: Deafness, Language Acquisition, Psycholinguistics, Semantics
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Nix, Gary W. – Volta Review, 1981
The author cites research that casts doubt upon the use of total communication as a means of facilitating speech, communication between parent and child, academic achievement, and vocabulary development in hearing-impaired children. He states that the Alexander Graham Bell Association is not antimanual communication, but rather prospeech. (CL)
Descriptors: Hearing Impairments, Manual Communication, Sign Language, Speech Communication
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Swisher, M. Virginia; McKee, David – Applied Linguistics, 1989
Explores the social relation between a natural sign language and the language of the dominant hearing culture, focusing on language attitudes, status and affiliation, language contact influence, language variation and change, and language standardization. (58 references) (CB)
Descriptors: Deafness, Language Attitudes, Language Standardization, Language Variation
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Woodward, James – Sign Language Studies, 1989
A comparison of terms from the lexical domain of color naming across 10 different sign languages from 7 different sign language groups suggested that, for naming colors, sign languages follow universal patterns not dependent upon the channel of language expression and reception. (Author)
Descriptors: Color, Comparative Analysis, Language Patterns, Language Universals
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Turner, Graham H. – Sign Language Studies, 1994
Carol Padden's influential framework for observations of deaf culture is examined. Some potentially potent socio-anthropological ideas are used to sketch implications for revisions of such a framework, adjusting concepts of culture and asking how notions of deaf culture are constructed. (Contains 55 references.) (Author/LB)
Descriptors: Anthropology, Cultural Context, Deafness, Hearing Impairments
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Johnson, Robert E. – Sign Language Studies, 1991
Examines a traditional Mayan village in the Yucatan where deaf inhabitants use a sign language that is distinct from that used in other Mexican communities. Because the hearing villagers are able to communicate in this sign language, the deaf inhabitants are almost fully integrated into the social and economic life of the village. (22 references)…
Descriptors: Deafness, Ethnography, Foreign Countries, Sign Language
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Siple, Linda A. – Sign Language Studies, 1993
Twenty master Sign Language interpreters transliterated monologue containing normal speech pausing and then transliterated same passage with inappropriate pausing and reduced intonation. When transliterating, interpreters render source message pauses with visible signals. Interpreters render different kinds of auditory pauses with different kinds…
Descriptors: Deaf Interpreting, Eye Fixations, Eye Movements, Interpreters
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Wilcox, Sherman – Sign Language Studies, 2001
Discusses the work of William Stokoe who not only made the claim that American Sign Language is in fact language, but who also questioned the view of linguists of the time and built a unique account of the gestural theory of language. Suggests that semantic phonology is the true legacy of Stokoe's lifelong study of language. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Deafness, Linguistic Theory, Nonverbal Communication
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Stewart, David A. – Sign Language Studies, 2001
Looks at what William Stokoe taught educators about teaching deaf children. Among his ideas were that signing is more than just a away to communicate, deaf children should begin to acquire sign language during their infant years, teaching begins with a commitment to one's beliefs, good teachers are innovative thinkers, and it is important to look…
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Beliefs, Deafness, Educational Philosophy
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Stokoe, William C. – Sign Language Studies, 2001
Suggests that various parts of the grammar of American Sign Language--particularly its verb and pronoun system--give convincing evidence that such grammar cannot have derived from the grammars of spoken languages; rather the continuity is from cognitive activity expressed in gSigns toward linguistic organization both of the expressive material and…
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Cognitive Processes, Deafness, Grammar
Schein, Jerome D. – ACEHI Journal/Revue ACEDA, 1995
Spanish Sign Language (SSL) is now the second most used sign language. This article introduces resources for the study of SSL, including three SSL dictionaries--two from Argentina and one from Puerto Rico. Differences in SSL between and within the two countries are noted. Implications for deaf educators in North America are drawn. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Deafness, Dialects, Dictionaries, Elementary Secondary Education
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Gussenhoven, Carlos – Language and Speech, 1999
Three experimental techniques that can be used to investigate the gradient of discrete nature of intonational differences, the semantic task, the imitation task, and the pitch range task are discussed and evaluated. It is pointed out that categorical perception is a sufficient but not a necessary, property of phonological discreteness. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Intonation, Oral Language, Phonetics, Phonology
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Napier, Jemina – Sign Language Studies, 2002
Explores the role and status of hearing people within the Deaf community, in particular sign language interpreters. Indicates that hearing people and sign language interpreters in particular can become members of the Deaf community. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Deaf Interpreting, Deafness, Hearing (Physiology), Helping Relationship
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Buchsbaum, Bradley; Pickell, Bert; Love, Tracy; Hatrak, Marla; Bellugi, Ursula; Hickok, Gregory – Brain and Language, 2005
The nature of the representations maintained in verbal working memory is a topic of debate. Some authors argue for a modality-dependent code, tied to particular sensory or motor systems. Others argue for a modality-neutral code. Sign language affords a unique perspective because it factors out the effects of modality. In an fMRI experiment, deaf…
Descriptors: Memory, Sign Language, Deafness, Neurolinguistics
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