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[Sign language is a language].
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Sign Language Typology: The Contribution of Rural Sign Languages [PDF]
Since the 1990s, the field of sign language typology has shown that sign languages exhibit typological variation at all relevant levels of linguistic description. These initial typological comparisons were heavily skewed toward the urban sign languages of developed countries, mostly in the Western world.
Connie de Vos, Roland Pfau
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2007 9th International Symposium on Signal Processing and Its Applications, 2007
In this paper, an image processing algorithm is presented for the interpretation of the Taiwanese sign language, which is one of the sign languages used by the majority of the deaf community. The process involves two layer classifications. At first, coarse classification is done according to detection of hand motion and tracking the hand location and ...
Maryam Pahlevanzadeh +2 more
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In this paper, an image processing algorithm is presented for the interpretation of the Taiwanese sign language, which is one of the sign languages used by the majority of the deaf community. The process involves two layer classifications. At first, coarse classification is done according to detection of hand motion and tracking the hand location and ...
Maryam Pahlevanzadeh +2 more
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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.
J D, Bonvillian, K E, Nelson, J M, Rhyne
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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.
J D, Bonvillian, K E, Nelson, J M, Rhyne
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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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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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