Research on sign languages and research on co-speech gestures both used to focus primarily on manual aspects of sign and gesture. However, nonmanual elements performed by the body, the head, and the face also play an essential role in communication, either as gestural means or as grammatical markers. As signers use their upper body to express language, they both sign and gesture in the same so-called visual-gestural modality. Interestingly, many co-speech gestures have found their way into the sign language system as linguistic markers with a grammatical function. Thus, it is quite challenging to distinguish between affective and grammatical nonmanual features. This chapter presents the diversity of nonmanual elements and their manifold functions in sign languages on the continuum from gestural to grammatical markers. As signers quite naturally and intuitively gesture similar Unauthenticated Download Date | 5/18/16 3:44 PM
Sign language offers a unique perspective on the human faculty of language by illustrating that linguistic abilities are not bound to speech and writing. In studies of spoken and written language processing, lexical variables such as, for example, age of acquisition have been found to play an important role, but such information is not as yet available for German Sign Language (Deutsche Gebärdensprache, DGS). Here, we present a set of norms for frequency, age of acquisition, and iconicity for more than 300 lexical DGS signs, derived from subjective ratings by 32 deaf signers. We also provide additional norms for iconicity and transparency for the same set of signs derived from ratings by 30 hearing non-signers. In addition to empirical norming data, the dataset includes machine-readable information about a sign’s correspondence in German and English, as well as annotations of lexico-semantic and phonological properties: one-handed vs. two-handed, place of articulation, most likely lexical class, animacy, verb type, (potential) homonymy, and potential dialectal variation. Finally, we include information about sign onset and offset for all stimulus clips from automated motion-tracking data. All norms, stimulus clips, data, as well as code used for analysis are made available through the Open Science Framework in the hope that they may prove to be useful to other researchers: 10.17605/OSF.IO/MZ8J4
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