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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
The Iconicity And Non-Arbitrariness Of Body Locations In Four Unrelated Sign Languages, John Samson
The Iconicity And Non-Arbitrariness Of Body Locations In Four Unrelated Sign Languages, John Samson
Theses and Dissertations
In this thesis, I show that universally, there is a strong tendency for signs located on the body to have an iconic or non-arbitrary motivation, especially in their original form. I analyze sign language dictionaries from four unrelated sign languages and establish an iconic or non-arbitrary link between the form of the signs and their meaning, and classify those links according to 8 categories of body location iconicity and 3 categories of non-arbitrariness. The strength of this tendency depends on the percentage of signs that are shown to have an iconic or non-arbitrary link. For the data analyzed here this …
Toward A Further Understanding Of The Extensibility Of Sign Languages, Jason Hopkins
Toward A Further Understanding Of The Extensibility Of Sign Languages, Jason Hopkins
Theses and Dissertations
Sign language video recordings have limited extensibility when compared with live, face-to-face communication by signers. In an effort to improve the extensibility of video recordings this study explores the possibility of leveraging a common meaning negotiation technique, depictional signing, to increase understanding of recorded texts. In an effort to gauge the understanding of depictional signing compared to lexical signing a Recorded Text Test was devised using two texts, one with a high number of visual depictions, the other with a high number of lexical signs. While a comparison of the results of the two tests did not substantiate the hypothesis …
A Grammar Of Signwriting, Stuart M. Thiessen
A Grammar Of Signwriting, Stuart M. Thiessen
Theses and Dissertations
Signed languages have not enjoyed the benefits of writing for lack of an effective writing system. Writing systems designed for spoken languages are not easily adaptable to signed languages because signed languages are not based on sound. A successful writing system for sign languages must convey a different set of articulators, namely the configurations and movements of the hands, head, and body to convey meaning. This necessarily means that writing systems for signed languages must find a way to express those articulators, reducing a three-dimensional event to a written representation.
One such writing system is SignWriting, a system developed by …