The effect of sign iconicity in the mental lexicon of hearing non-signers and proficient signers: Evidence of cross-modal priming
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Language, Cognition and Neuroscience, 30, 5, (2015), pp. 574-585ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Taalwetenschap
Journal title
Language, Cognition and Neuroscience
Volume
vol. 30
Issue
iss. 5
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 574
Page end
p. 585
Subject
Language in our Hands: Learning sign language; Multimodal language and communicationAbstract
The present study investigated the priming effect of iconic signs in the mental lexicon of hearing adults. Non-signers and proficient British Sign Language (BSL) users took part in a cross-modal lexical decision task. The results indicate that iconic signs activated semantically related words in non-signers' lexicon. Activation occurred regardless of the type of referent because signs depicting actions and perceptual features of an object yielded the same response times. The pattern of activation was different in proficient signers because only action signs led to cross-modal activation. We suggest that non-signers process iconicity in signs in the same way as they do gestures, but after acquiring a sign language, there is a shift in the mechanisms used to process iconic manual structures.
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- Academic publications [246164]
- Electronic publications [133781]
- Faculty of Arts [29989]
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