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From Interpreting Student to Deaf Interpreter: A Case Study of Vocational Identity Development
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In: Journal of Interpretation (2021)
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Insights from U.S. deaf patients: Interpreters’ presence and receptive skills matter in patient-centered communication care
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In: Journal of Interpretation (2020)
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Differential coding of perception in the world’s languages
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In: ISSN: 0027-8424 ; EISSN: 1091-6490 ; Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America ; https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01984190 ; Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America , National Academy of Sciences, 2018, 115 (45), pp.11369-11376 (2018)
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Referring strategies in American Sign Language and English (with co-speech gesture): The role of modality in referring to non-nameable objects
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Differential coding of perception in the world's languages
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Majid, Asifa; Roberts, Sean G.; Cilissen, Ludy; Emmorey, Karen; Nicodemus, Brenda; O’Grady, Lucinda; Woll, Bencie; LeLan, Barbara; Sousa, Hilario de; Cansler, Brian L.; Shayan, Shakila; De Vos, Connie; Senft, Gunter; Enfield, Nick J.; Razak, Rogayah A.; Fedden, Sebastian; Tufvesson, Sylvia; Dingemanse, Mark; Ozturk, Ozge; Brown, Penelope; Hill, Clair (R19929); Le Guen, Olivier; Hirtzel, Vincent; Gijn, Rik van; Sicoli, Mark A.; Levinson, Stephen C.. - : U.S., National Academy of Sciences, 2018
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Abstract:
Is there a universal hierarchy of the senses, such that some senses (e.g., vision) are more accessible to consciousness and linguistic description than others (e.g., smell)? The long-standing presumption in Western thought has been that vision and audition are more objective than the other senses, serving as the basis of knowledge and understanding, whereas touch, taste, and smell are crude and of little value. This predicts that humans ought to be better at communicating about sight and hearing than the other senses, and decades of work based on English and related languages certainly suggests this is true. However, how well does this reflect the diversity of languages and communities worldwide? To test whether there is a universal hierarchy of the senses, stimuli from the five basic senses were used to elicit descriptions in 20 diverse languages, including 3 unrelated sign languages. We found that languages differ fundamentally in which sensory domains they linguistically code systematically, and how they do so. The tendency for better coding in some domains can be explained in part by cultural preoccupations. Although languages seem free to elaborate specific sensory domains, some general tendencies emerge: for example, with some exceptions, smell is poorly coded. The surprise is that, despite the gradual phylogenetic accumulation of the senses, and the imbalances in the neural tissue dedicated to them, no single hierarchy of the senses imposes itself upon language.
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Keyword:
language and languages; smell; vision; XXXXXX - Unknown
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1720419115 http://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:53566
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‘My Fellow Citizens’: Deaf Perspectives on Translating the Opening Line of a Presidential Inaugural Address into American Sign Language
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In: Journal of Interpretation (2016)
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Directionality in ASL-English interpreting: Accuracy and articulation quality in L1 and L2
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Preparation strategies used by American Sign Language- English interpreters to render President Barack Obama’s inaugural address ...
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Preparation strategies used by American Sign Language- English interpreters to render President Barack Obama’s inaugural address
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Direction asymmetries in spoken and signed language interpreting*
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