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Signed Languages

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Is sign language a natural language? Or is it something else (e.g. pidgin, ... the simultaneous use of articulation and signs has the disadvantage of injuring ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Signed Languages


1
Signed Languages
  • with special attention to
  • American Sign Language (ASL)

2
Key Questions
  • Is sign language a natural language? Or is it
    something else (e.g. pidgin, degenerate form of
    spoken language)?
  • Is sign language based on spoken language? Is
    ASL a manual form of English?
  • How do sign languages come to be? What
    socio-linguistics problems do deaf people face?

3
How can we tell if Signed Languages are natural
languages?
  • Q What properties would we expect to find in any
    natural language?
  • Back to design features!
  • Based on the reading, what design features does
    ASL demonstrate?

4
Compositionality in ASL
  • phonemes of spoken languages can be described in
    terms of
  • voice.
  • place of articulation
  • manner of articulation.
  • Are there any analogs in ASL?

5
Yes. Signs in ASL differ with respect to
  • Handshape.
  • Location of sign in signing space.
  • Movement.
  • Palm orientation.

6
Common unmarked (i.e. either hand) handshapes in
ASL
7
Common marked handshapes in ASL (only on dominant
hand)
8
Examples
  • Handshape
  • CANDY / APPLE / JEALOUS
  • Location
  • KEY / APPLE
  • Movement
  • TAPE / CHAIR / TRAIN

9
Personal Pronouns
  • CASE handshape
  • (plain G, possessive B)
  • PERSON palm orientation
  • (1 inward, 2 outward, 3 side)
  • NUMBER movement
  • (straight singular, arc plural)

10
Are natural sign languages based on spoken
languages?
  • Is ASL a manual form of English?
  • How can we address this question?
  • If the two languages are the same what do we
    expect to find?
  • only slight differences, maybe as dialects differ
    (minor deviations of lexicon, syntax, morphology,
    etc).

11
If they are different?
  • They should
  • Share basic properties of language
  • compositionality
  • acquisition
  • Signing and hearing children tend to pass
    through the same milestones at the same time
    Emmorey.
  • Babbling, phonological simplification of
    signs/words, overgeneralization of morphological
    rules, misanalysis and subsequent reanalysis of
    constructions, misuse of pronouns, etc.

12
  • 2) They should differ in important ways with
    respect to lexicon, morphology, and Syntax
    (ignoring phonology)
  • Lexicon
  • fast slow
  • new old
  • happy sad
  • right wrong / heavy

13
  • Morphology
  • Derivation different categories available.
  • Inflection in ASL several verbs inflect for
    Subject, and Object
  • ASK, SEND, LOOK AT, HATE (orientation direction
    of movement)
  • INFORM, GIVE (direction of movement)
  • CRITICIZE, OWE, PITY (orientation)

14
  • Syntax.
  • Topic comment structure, word order, copula
  • BUS YOU RIDE-ON SCHOOL? Do you ride the bus to
    school?2.
  • DENTIST, HOW OFTEN YOU GO? How often do you go
    to the dentist?
  • 3. MY IDEA, SHE NEED FORGIVE HIM.
  • 4. WATCH TV, I NEVER
  • 5. I STUDENT I

15
How do signed languages come to be?
  • Q Is it the case that wherever there are deaf
    people, there is a sign language?
  • evidence against?

16
What are the key issues affecting the acquisition
and transmission of signed languages?
  • most deaf children born to hearing parents (lt90)
  • incidence of deafness (.1 of the population
    under 45) results in wide distribution of the
    deaf population.
  • practical difficulty in educating deaf children.
  • societal prejudice

17
How did ASL arise?
  • Abbè de l'Epée (1712-1789) Establishes school for
    the deaf in Paris.
  • Purpose to be able to give deaf people the
    sacraments (do deaf people have a soul?).
  • Paris at the time is one of the largest cities in
    the world (1750 pop 565,000).

18
  • In Eastern U.S. parents of deaf children looking
    for a way to educate them. Thomas Hopkins
    Gallaudet travels to Europe (first England,
    developers of BSL won't share their system, it is
    proprietary). Abbè Sicard (successor) however
    is touring Europe, showing off the French
    methods.
  • 1817 T.H. Gallaudet brings Laurent Clerc back to
    the US as an instructor at school for the deaf in
    Hartford Connecticut.
  • 1864 Abraham Lincoln signs charter for first deaf
    college (later Gallaudet U. which is still the
    only 4 year deaf college).

19
1880 Milan Congress declaration that oral
instruction is superior to manual instruction.
  • First two resolutions of the Milan Congress
  • The Convention, considering the incontestable
    superiority of articulation over signs in
    restoring the deaf-mute to society and giving him
    a fuller knowledge of language, declares that the
    oral method should be preferred to that of signs
    in the education and instruction of deaf-mutes.
  • The Convention, considering that the simultaneous
    use of articulation and signs has the
    disadvantage of injuring articulation and
    lip-reading and the precision of ideas, declares
    that the pure oral method should be preferred.

20
  • 1890 Alexander Grahm Bell sets up American
    Association to Promote the Teaching of Speech to
    the Deaf.
  • Leads to a dark era for ASL Deaf teachers loose
    their jobs in residential schools across the
    country, ASL is prohibited in residential schools
    (Gallaudet, however, maintains the use of ASL as
    primary language of instruction). Deaf children
    taught English and lip reading but NOT ASL.

21
How does ASL survive?
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