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Imitation Sign Language Skill and the Developmental Ease of Language Understanding (D-ELU) Model

机译:模仿手语技巧和语言理解的发展便利(D-ELU)模型

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摘要

Imitation and language processing are closely connected. According to the Ease of Language Understanding (ELU) model () pre-existing mental representation of lexical items facilitates language understanding. Thus, imitation of manual gestures is likely to be enhanced by experience of sign language. We tested this by eliciting imitation of manual gestures from deaf and hard-of-hearing (DHH) signing and hearing non-signing children at a similar level of language and cognitive development. We predicted that the DHH signing children would be better at imitating gestures lexicalized in their own sign language (Swedish Sign Language, SSL) than unfamiliar British Sign Language (BSL) signs, and that both groups would be better at imitating lexical signs (SSL and BSL) than non-signs. We also predicted that the hearing non-signing children would perform worse than DHH signing children with all types of gestures the first time (T1) we elicited imitation, but that the performance gap between groups would be reduced when imitation was elicited a second time (T2). Finally, we predicted that imitation performance on both occasions would be associated with linguistic skills, especially in the manual modality. A split-plot repeated measures ANOVA demonstrated that DHH signers imitated manual gestures with greater precision than non-signing children when imitation was elicited the second but not the first time. Manual gestures were easier to imitate for both groups when they were lexicalized than when they were not; but there was no difference in performance between familiar and unfamiliar gestures. For both groups, language skills at T1 predicted imitation at T2. Specifically, for DHH children, word reading skills, comprehension and phonological awareness of sign language predicted imitation at T2. For the hearing participants, language comprehension predicted imitation at T2, even after the effects of working memory capacity and motor skills were taken into account. These results demonstrate that experience of sign language enhances the ability to imitate manual gestures once representations have been established, and suggest that the inherent motor patterns of lexical manual gestures are better suited for representation than those of non-signs. This set of findings prompts a developmental version of the ELU model, D-ELU.
机译:模仿和语言处理紧密相连。根据易语言理解(ELU)模型(),词汇项的预先存在的心理表征有助于语言理解。因此,手手势的模仿可能会通过手语的体验得到增强。我们通过在聋人和听力障碍(DHH)签名中模仿人的手势,以及在语言和认知发展水平相似的情况下,听到非签名孩子的听力来进行测试。我们预计DHH签名子代会比不熟悉的英国手语(BSL)代号更擅长模仿以自己的手语(瑞典手语,SSL)词汇化的手势,并且这两个群体都将更擅长模仿词汇符号(SSL和(非BSL)。我们还预测,在我们第一次模仿时,听力不签名的孩子的表现会比使用所有手势的DHH签名孩子的表现差,但是当第二次模仿时,两组之间的表现差距将会减小( T2)。最后,我们预测,两种情况下的模仿表现都将与语言技能有关,尤其是在手动方式中。拆分图重复测量方差分析表明,DHH签名者在第二次而不是第一次模仿时,比未签名的孩子模仿手手势的精度更高。词汇被词化时,两组人都更容易模仿手势,而没有手势的人则更容易模仿。但是熟悉和不熟悉的手势在性能上没有区别。对于这两个群体,T1的语言能力都可以预测T2的模仿。具体来说,对于DHH儿童,其手语的阅读能力,理解力和语音意识可以预测T2的模仿。对于听觉参与者,即使考虑了工作记忆能力和运动技能的影响,语言理解仍会预测T2的模仿。这些结果表明,一旦建立了表示形式,手语的体验就增强了模仿手动手势的能力,并且表明词汇性手动手势的固有运动模式比非符号手势更适合于表示。这组发现提示了ELU模型D-ELU的开发版本。

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