The proposed research examines how the timing and richness of linguistic environments affect the outcome achieved by the language-learner. The primary objective is to understand the abilities all human learners apply to language acquisition, and how those abilities change with age. The research focuses on a generation of deaf Nicaraguan children and adults whose initial language environment provided severely deficient linguistic input: it included no previously developed sign language. When first brought into a community in the late 1970s, they began to create a new sign language, that is, they acquired something not available in their language environment. The study of the mechanisms by which language is acquired is usually complicated by the fact that there are multiple possible sources for the information obtained; any innate features of language and contributions of previous generations will also be present in the typical language environment. In the case of Nicaraguan Sign Language, however, the roles of instinct and invention are enhanced relative to environmental input. The logic of this research is based on systematic comparisons between the language environment and the language outcome of each sequential cohort of language-learners to enter the community over a period of two decades. Because the language has increased in complexity over that time, today's adults represent the (severely impoverished) language input to the adolescents that followed them, who in turn represent the (richer) language input to today's children. Identifying the complexity added by each sequential cohort reveals the learners' contribution. A series of comparisons are therefore proposed, comparing the signed production and comprehension of signers who entered the community in different years. These explore basic word order, agreement markers, locative devices, incorporation of manner and path elements into the verb phrase, vocabulary innovation, and nominal classifiers. Together these comparisons will help reveal how human learners confronted with an impoverished language environment create, organize, and systematize language information, and how these abilities vary with age.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01DC005407-02
Application #
6603478
Study Section
Biobehavioral and Behavioral Processes 3 (BBBP)
Program Officer
Cooper, Judith
Project Start
2002-07-01
Project End
2007-06-30
Budget Start
2003-07-01
Budget End
2004-06-30
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2003
Total Cost
$147,173
Indirect Cost
Name
Barnard College
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
068119601
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10027
Coppola, Marie; Senghas, Ann (2017) Is it language (yet)? The allure of the gesture-language binary. Behav Brain Sci 40:e50
Kocab, Annemarie; Senghas, Ann; Snedeker, Jesse (2016) The emergence of temporal language in Nicaraguan Sign Language. Cognition 156:147-163
Goldin-Meadow, S; Brentari, D; Coppola, M et al. (2015) Watching language grow in the manual modality: nominals, predicates, and handshapes. Cognition 136:381-95
Horton, L; Goldin-Meadow, S; Coppola, M et al. (2015) Forging a morphological system out of two dimensions: Agentivity and number. Open Linguist 1:596-613
Kocab, Annemarie; Pyers, Jennie; Senghas, Ann (2014) Referential shift in Nicaraguan Sign Language: a transition from lexical to spatial devices. Front Psychol 5:1540
Richie, Russell; Yang, Charles; Coppola, Marie (2014) Modeling the emergence of lexicons in homesign systems. Top Cogn Sci 6:183-95
Rabagliati, Hugh; Senghas, Ann; Johnson, Scott et al. (2012) Infant rule learning: advantage language, or advantage speech? PLoS One 7:e40517
Flaherty, Molly; Senghas, Ann (2011) Numerosity and number signs in deaf Nicaraguan adults. Cognition 121:427-36
Senghas, Ann (2011) The Emergence of Two Functions for Spatial Devices in Nicaraguan Sign Language. Hum Dev 53:287-302
Pyers, Jennie E; Shusterman, Anna; Senghas, Ann et al. (2010) Evidence from an emerging sign language reveals that language supports spatial cognition. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 107:12116-20

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