2022
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.716554
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On the Reliability of the Notion of Native Signer and Its Risks

Abstract: Who is a native signer? Since around 95% of deaf infants are born into a hearing family, deaf signers are exposed to a sign language at various moments of their life, and not only from birth. Moreover, the linguistic input they are exposed to is not always a fully fledged natural sign language. In this situation, is the notion of native signer as someone exposed to language from birth of any use? We review the results of the first large-scale cross-linguistic investigation on the effects of age of exposure to … Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Finally, our results show that age of exposure has a long‐lasting impact on the comprehension of wh questions, confirming that early language deprivation affects language competence in adulthood. This result joins many others (see Cecchetto et al 2022, Hauser et al 2021, Aristodemo et al 2022, Zorzi et al 2022) and strongly argues in favor of the implementation of language policies addressed to deaf children that prioritize sign‐language exposure as early as possible.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…Finally, our results show that age of exposure has a long‐lasting impact on the comprehension of wh questions, confirming that early language deprivation affects language competence in adulthood. This result joins many others (see Cecchetto et al 2022, Hauser et al 2021, Aristodemo et al 2022, Zorzi et al 2022) and strongly argues in favor of the implementation of language policies addressed to deaf children that prioritize sign‐language exposure as early as possible.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…Thus, rather than compare the signing of these individuals to native signer ideals, researchers could instead consider frameworks associated with other “vulnerable” grammars, such as those examined by researchers on language attrition (Hicks & Dominguez, 2020). These alternatives could also provide better baselines for assessing deaf signers who grew up without signing deaf parents (Zorzi et al., 2022), or whose deaf parents do not themselves meet the traditional qualifications for native signers (Sümer & Özyürek, 2022). Such deaf signers, along with hearing M2L2 learners, play a nontrivial role in shaping the sign language, since they constitute the great majority of language users (De Meulder, 2019).…”
Section: Future Directions: Revisiting Notions Of “Native Signer” And...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For those who eventually acquire a conventional SL later, that language is often assumed to be their first but not native language, owing to significant differences between their end state grammars and that of “typical” L1 signers with early sign language input (Mayberry & Kluender, 2018; Newport, 1988). Investigating what happens when a learner with this background embarks on the process of learning a second sign language contributes to our field's critical re‐evaluation of traditional notions of first language and native language, which are difficult to define, particularly among DHH populations (Koulidobrova & Chen Pichler, 2021; Zorzi et al., 2022).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…All FluentSigners-50 contributors use sign language on the daily basis. Not all of them can be defined as native signers, that is, as signers who have acquired KRSL from birth from their parents, but note that this notion in general is complicated and questionable [ 31 ]. Instead of trying to divide them into native or non-native, we collected data on their hearing status, daily use of KRSL, where they acquired KRSL, and the preferred language of their family when they were growing up (adapted from Allen (2015) [ 32 ]).…”
Section: Fluentsigners-50 Datasetmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…All FluentSigners-50 contributors use sign language on the daily basis. Not all of them can be defined as native signers, that is, as signers who have acquired KRSL from birth from their parents, but note that this notion in general is complicated and questionable [31]. Instead of…”
Section: Dataset Collectionmentioning
confidence: 99%