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Sign language recognition

2017 International Conference on Computer Science and Engineering (UBMK), 2017
Millions of people around the world suffer from hearing disability. This large number demonstrates the importance of developing a sign language recognition system converting sign language to text for sign language to become clearer to understand without a translator. In this paper, a sign language recognition system using Backpropagation Neural Network
Karayilan, Tulay, KILIÇ, ÖZKAN
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Sign language and autism

Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 1981
Research findings and issues in teaching sign language to nonspeaking autistic children are reviewed. Data on over 100 children indicate that nearly all autistic children learn receptive and expressive signs, and many learn to combine signs. These children also exhibit marked improvement in adaptive behaviors.
John D. Bonvillian   +2 more
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PALILALIA IN SIGN LANGUAGE

Neurology, 2008
Sign languages, which use the hands and arms as articulators, are the natural languages of deaf people. Research indicates that sign, like speech, can break down at the level of motor control, in the context of a movement disorder such as Parkinson disease (PD).1 This article describes the first known case of a deaf sign language user with progressive ...
Bencie Woll, Martha E. Tyrone
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Sign language aphasia

2022
Signed languages are naturally occurring, fully formed linguistic systems that rely on the movement of the hands, arms, torso, and face within a sign space for production, and are perceived predominantly using visual perception. Despite stark differences in modality and linguistic structure, functional neural organization is strikingly similar to ...
Emily B, Goldberg   +1 more
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Sign Language Acquisition

2008
How children acquire a sign language and the stages of sign language development are extremely important topics in sign linguistics and deaf education, with studies in this field enabling assessment of an individual child’s communicative skills in comparison to others. In order to do research in this area it is important to use the right methodological
Baker, A., Woll, B.
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Name Signs in Greek Sign Language

American Annals of the Deaf, 2002
Name signs have existed in Greek Deaf culture since antiquity. However, little is known about Greek Sign Language (GSL) and the Greek Deaf community. Based on interviews with 200 people, the phonological characteristics of Greek name signs are described, as well as the frequency of occurrence of specific name signs and the influence of spoken Greek ...
Robert Hoffmeister, Vassilis Kourbetis
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The neurology of sign language

Brain and Development, 2004
Forms of sign language have developed in a number of countries. American Sign Language, which originated from French signing, has been most extensively researched. As sign language is based on gestures executed in space and perceived visually it might be thought that it would mainly be a function of the right cerebral hemisphere when this is the non ...
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What is a sign language?

Linguistic Approaches to Bilingualism, 2016
4 p.
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Signs and Language

1973
(1) German, French, English, Latin, etc. are languages. Here we wish to talk about language, and to begin with we mean one of these languages, all of which seem to us equivalent in this context; that is, the facts we must examine are almost the same in all these languages, so that it is indifferent which of them we select.
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