The Gesture-to-Sign Trajectory: Phonological Parameters in Production and Real-Time Comprehension


Funding:
DFG SPP 2392 Visual Communication (ViCom), Frankfurt am Main, Germany
(With Prof. Dr. Petra B. Schumacher, University of Cologne)

Project summary:
Video in DGS and English on the ViCom website.

The visual modality is well-known for its high potential for iconic representation, in particular, of information related to size and shape, manual action, location and motion. This affordance is exploited in both sign language and gesture and accounts to a significant degree for the similarity of expression across these domains in these modes of communicative expression. In the present project, we investigate this similarity with respect to the transition from gesture to sign in L2M2 (second language, second modality) sign language acquisition. The similarities between sign and gesture have important implications for L2M2 acquisition of a sign language, as learners’ gestural repertoire can support but also interfere with learning the phonologically specified forms in the established lexicon of sign language. In the proposed project, we investigate learners’ trajectories of transition from gesture to sign as well as their perception by proficient/native signers. To this end, we employ behavioral measures, a sign repetition task in a longitudinal study and electrophysiological measures.

Project members:
PhD candidate:
Door Spruijt

Student assistants:
Susanne Dings
Anakin Magiera