Language, Cognition, and the Brain

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A01=Karen Emmorey
American Sign Language
Articulatory Suppression
Asl Signer
Author_Karen Emmorey
Category=CFZ
children
Classifier Handshapes
Danish Sign
deaf
Deaf Children
Deaf Signers
eq_bestseller
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
ERP Response
gesture studies
HC
hearing
Hearing Nonsigners
Hearing Subjects
language acquisition research
Late Learners
Lateralized Lexical Decision Task
Lexical Access
Manual Babbling
Movement Morphemes
Native Asl Signer
neural plasticity
Nicaraguan Sign Language
Nonpresent Referents
nonsigners
Phonological Loop
Phonological Similarity Effect
psycholinguistics
referential
Referential Shift
shift
sign
sign language cognitive neuroscience
signers
signing
space
Suffix Effect
visuospatial processing
WH Question
Working Memory
working memory systems

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805833980
  • Weight: 910g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Nov 2001
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Once signed languages are recognized as natural human languages, a world of exploration opens up. Signed languages provide a powerful tool for investigating the nature of human language and language processing, the relation between cognition and language, and the neural organization of language. The value of sign languages lies in their modality. Specifically, for perception, signed languages depend upon high-level vision and motion processing systems, and for production, they require the integration of motor systems involving the hands and face. These facts raise many questions: What impact does this different biological base have for grammatical systems? For online language processing? For the acquisition of language? How does it affect nonlinguistic cognitive structures and processing? Are the same neural systems involved?

These are some of the questions that this book aims at addressing. The answers provide insight into what constrains grammatical form, language processing, linguistic working memory, and hemispheric specialization for language. The study of signed languages allows researchers to address questions about the nature of linguistic and cognitive systems that otherwise could not be easily addressed.

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