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Where to look for ASL sub-lexical structure in the visual world: A reply to Salverda (2016)
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Neural Language Processing in Adolescent First-Language Learners
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Neural Language Processing in Adolescent First-Language Learners
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Real-time processing of ASL signs: Delayed first language acquisition affects organization of the mental lexicon
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Neural stages of spoken, written, and signed word processing in beginning second language learners.
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In: Frontiers in human neuroscience, vol 7, iss JUN (2013)
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Learning to Look for Language: Development of Joint Attention in Young Deaf Children
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Abstract:
Joint attention between hearing children and their caregivers is typically achieved when the adult provides spoken, auditory linguistic input that relates to the child’s current visual focus of attention. Deaf children interacting through sign language must learn to continually switch visual attention between people and objects in order to achieve the classic joint attention characteristic of young hearing children. The current study investigated the mechanisms used by sign language dyads to achieve joint attention within a single modality. Four deaf children, ages 1;9 to 3;7, were observed during naturalistic interactions with their deaf mothers. The children engaged in frequent and meaningful gaze shifts, and were highly sensitive to a range of maternal cues. Children’s control of gaze in this sample was largely developed by age two. The gaze patterns observed in deaf children were not observed in a control group of hearing children, indicating that modality-specific patterns of joint attention behaviors emerge when the language of parent-infant interaction occurs in the visual mode.
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URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24363628 https://doi.org/10.1080/15475441.2012.760381 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3865891
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Neural stages of spoken, written, and signed word processing in beginning second language learners
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Signed words in the congenitally deaf evoke typical late lexico-semantic responses with no early visual responses in left superior temporal cortex
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Where to look for American Sign Language (ASL) sublexical structure in the visual world: Reply to Salverda (2016).
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