Washington: When a person uses sign language to communicate, they use their hands as well as mouth – but now a study has found out whether the two are used in unison or separately.
Researchers David P Vinson and colleagues at University College London found that the hand and lip movements are separate in the signer’s brain, not part of the same sign.
The team recruited both deaf and hearing signers, all of whom grew up signing with deaf parents.
Each person sat in front of a monitor with a video camera pointed at them. They were shown sets of pictures and were asked to sign the name of each item. In another session, they were shown those words in English and asked to translate them into British Sign Language.
“We noticed that there were quite a few cases where the hands and the mouth seemed to be doing something different,” said Vinson.
They found participants making mistakes—signing and mouthing “banana” when the picture was an apple, for example.
But when they were translating English words, the hands made the same kind of mistakes, but the lips didn’t. This suggests that the lip movement isn’t part of the sign.
This means that in essence, they were reading out English words and pronouncing them out loud at the same time – like processing two languages at the same time.
This study appears in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.
ANI
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