Elicited imitation of verb agreement in American Sign Language: Iconically or morphologically determined?
- 30 June 1987
- journal article
- Published by Elsevier in Journal of Memory and Language
- Vol. 26 (3) , 362-376
- https://doi.org/10.1016/0749-596x(87)90119-7
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Think and Believe: Sequentiality in American Sign LanguageLanguage, 1984
- Gestural Communication in Deaf Children: Noneffect of Parental Input on Language DevelopmentScience, 1983
- Sign-based short-term coding of American Sign Language signs and printed English words by congenitally deaf signersCognitive Psychology, 1982
- Regularity vs anomaly: the acquisition of Hebrew inflectional morphologyJournal of Child Language, 1981
- Visual and "Phonetic" Coding of Movement: Evidence from American Sign LanguageScience, 1981
- Representation of inflected signs from American Sign Language in short-term memoryMemory & Cognition, 1981
- Basic objects in natural categoriesCognitive Psychology, 1976
- Space, Time, and Person Reference in American Sign LanguageLanguage, 1975
- Rules, rote, and analogy in morphological formations by Hungarian childrenJournal of Child Language, 1975
- The Origin of SpeechScientific American, 1960