Language by mouth and by hand
April 3rd, 2013 in Other Sciences / Social Sciences 

Humans favor speech as the primary means of linguistic communication. Spoken 
languages are so common many think language and speech are one and the same. 
But the prevalence of sign languages suggests otherwise. Not only can Deaf 
communities generate language using manual gestures, but their languages share 
some of their design and neural mechanisms with spoken languages.

New research by Northeastern University's Prof. Iris Berent further 
underscores the flexibility of human language and its robustness across both 
spoken and signed channels of communication.

In a paper published in PLOS ONE, Prof. Berent and her team show that English 
speakers can learn to rapidly recognize key structures of American Sign 
Language (ASL), despite no previous familiarity with this language.

Like spoken languages, signed languages construct words from meaningless 
syllables (akin to can-dy in English) and distinguish them from morphemes 
(meaningful units, similar to the English can-s). The research group examined 
whether non-signers might be able to discover this structure.

In a series of experiments, Prof. Berent and her team (Amanda Dupuis, a 
graduate student at Northeastern University, and Dr. Diane Brentari of the 
University of Chicago) asked English speakers to identify syllables in novel 
ASL signs. Results showed that these non-signing adults quickly learned to 
identify the number of signed syllables (one vs. two), and they could even 
distinguish syllables from morphemes.

Remarkably, however, people did not act as indiscriminate general-purpose 
learners. While they could easily learn to discern the structure of ASL signs, 
they were unable to do so when presented with signs that were equally complex, 
but violated the structure of ASL (as well as any known human language).

The results suggest that participants extended their linguistic knowledge from 
spoken language to sign language. This finding is significant because it shows 
that linguistic principles are abstract, and they can apply to both speech and 
sign. Nonetheless, Dr. Berent explains, language is also constrained, as not 
all linguistic principles are equally learnable. "Our present results do not 
establish the origin of these limitations- whether they only result from 
people's past experience with English, or from more general design properties 
of the language system. But regardless of source, language transcends speech, 
as people can extend their linguistic knowledge to a new modality."

Provided by Northeastern University

"Language by mouth and by hand." April 3rd, 2013. 
http://phys.org/news/2013-04-language-mouth.html



-------------------------------------------
AGI
Archives: https://www.listbox.com/member/archive/303/=now
RSS Feed: https://www.listbox.com/member/archive/rss/303/21088071-f452e424
Modify Your Subscription: 
https://www.listbox.com/member/?member_id=21088071&id_secret=21088071-58d57657
Powered by Listbox: http://www.listbox.com

Reply via email to