6533b85bfe1ef96bd12ba8ab
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Embodiment and American Sign Language
Eva GutierrezDavid P. Corinasubject
Cultural StudiesLinguistics and LanguageSensory motorCommunicationAmerican Sign Languagebusiness.industryCommunicationmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesExperimental and Cognitive Psychology050105 experimental psychologylanguage.human_language03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineBody schemaPerceptionSociolinguistics of sign languageslanguage0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesbusinessPsychology030217 neurology & neurosurgerymedia_commondescription
Little is known about how individual signs that occur in naturally produced signed languages are recognized. Here we examine whether sign understanding may be grounded in sensorimotor properties by evaluating a signer’s ability to make lexical decisions to American Sign Language (ASL) signs that are articulated either congruent with or incongruent with the observer’s own handedness. Our results show little evidence for handedness congruency effects for native signers’ perception of ASL, however handedness congruency effects were seen in non-native late learners of ASL and hearing ASL-English bilinguals. The data are compatible with a theory of sign recognition that makes reference to internally simulated articulatory control signals — a forward model based upon sensory-motor properties of one’s owns body. The data suggest that sign recognition may rely upon an internal body schema when processing is non-optimal as a result of having learned ASL later in life. Native signers however may have developed representations of signs which are less bound to the hand with which it is performed, suggesting a different engagement of an internal forward model for rapid lexical decisions.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-11-28 | Gesture |