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Effects of semantic and cheremic context on acquisition of manual signs
Authors:Carol Bergfeld Mills  Linda J. Weldon
Affiliation:1. Psychology Department, University of Maryland, 20742, College Park, Maryland
2. Advanced Research Resources Organization, 20814, Bethesda, Maryland
Abstract:In two experiments, sign-naive subjects acquired the meanings for manual signs of American Sign Language by learning to respond with the English word equivalents when signs were presented. The results showed that when the signs on a to-be-learned list were related to each other in handshape configuration (cheremically similar), they were more difficult to acquire than when semantically similar. Whether the similar signs were grouped together during presentation or were separated by other dissimilar signs had no effect on the number of signs correctly acquired. These results were the same for the identical signs learned in the cheremically or semantically similar contexts as for the fists as a whole. The results have implications for teaching sign language to hearing adults.
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