Does learning language change the way we think about

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Does learning language change the way we think about"

Transcription

1 Q:1; 2 Number without a language model Elizabet Spaepen a, Marie Coppola a, Elizabeth S. Spelke b, Susan E. Carey b,1, and Susan Goldin-Meadow a a Department of Psychology, University of Chicago, IL 60637; and b Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA Contributed by Susan E. Carey, December 7, 2010 (sent for review June 28, 2009) Q:3 Cross-cultural studies suggest that access to a conventional language containing words that can be used for counting is essential to develop representations of large exact numbers. However, cultures that lack a conventional counting system typically differ from cultures that have such systems, not only in language but also in many other ways. As a result, it is difficult to isolate the effects of language on the development of number representations. Here we examine the numerical abilities of individuals who lack conventional language for number (deaf individuals who do not have access to a usable model for language, spoken or signed) but who live in a numerate culture (Nicaragua) and thus have access to other aspects of culture that might foster the development of number. These deaf individuals develop their own gestures, called homesigns, to communicate. We show that homesigners use gestures to communicate about number. However, they do not consistently extend the correct number of fingers when communicating about sets greater than three, nor do they always correctly match the number of items in one set to a target set when that target set is greater than three. Thus, even when integrated into a numerate society, individuals who lack input from a conventional language do not spontaneously develop representations of large exact numerosities. numerical cognition Does learning language change the way we think about number? The exact quantities to which words like seven, eight, and nine refer seem so basic it is hard to imagine that we might need the word seven to have the concept seven. But evidence from groups who have not been exposed to conventional numerical systems suggests that language, particularly the numeral list in a count routine, may be importantly involved in the ability to represent the exact cardinal values of large sets. The Mundurukú (1) and Pirahã (2) are Amazonian people in rural Brazil whose languages do not contain words for exact numbers larger than five (the Mundurukú) or any exact number words at all (the Pirahã).* Adults in these cultures have not been reported to invent ways to communicate about the large numbers for which they do not have words. In addition, these groups do not display a robust ability to match sets exactly with respect to number, except when a one-to-one correspondence strategy is readily available (e.g., pairing each object in one visible row with a corresponding object in a second visible row) (3). The absence of a linguistic model for representing exact number (in this case, a count list) could explain the difficulties Pirahã and Mundurukú adults have representing large exact numbers (2, 4 6). However, their difficulties could just as easily be explained by the absence of culturally supported contexts in which exact number must be encoded (7, 8). To disentangle these possibilities, we investigated the numerical abilities of individuals who lack a linguistic model for number but who live in the numerate culture of Nicaragua: homesigners. Homesigners are profoundly deaf individuals whose hearing losses prevent them from acquiring the spoken language that surrounds them, and who have not had the opportunity to learn a conventional sign language (10 14). They use homemade gestures to communicate with the hearing individuals around them. However, homesigners living in western cultures participate in worlds that are fully numerate and deal in exact (and not just approximate) large numbers. In other words, homesigners are surrounded by a culture in which exact number is valued, and they have at least partly mastered the monetary system of their culture (as detailed later). If living in a numerate culture is sufficient to foster complete representations of exact number concepts in the absence of input from a conventional language, homesigners might be expected to succeed on communicative and noncommunicative tasks requiring representations of large exact numerical quantities outside of the domain of money, tasks on which the Mundurukú and Pirahã fail. Participants were four adult homesigners in Nicaragua, ages y (three men), who did not know one another. Their hearing losses prevent them from acquiring Spanish and they do not have access to Nicaraguan Sign Language. They use homesign exclusively to communicate with the hearing individuals around them. The four homesigners show no congenital cognitive deficits and performed as well as hearing siblings and friends on tasks testing mental rotation skills (SI Text). They hold jobs, Q:7 make money, and interact socially with hearing friends and family. None had attended school regularly. To separate effects of illiteracy and lack of schooling from lack of a conventional count list, we tested four unschooled, hearing Nicaraguans (ages y, all female) who are fluent Spanish speakers. To rule out deafness and communicating in the manual modality as a cause of any deficits we might observe, we tested two fluent deaf users of American Sign Language (ASL): one man, age 69 y, and one woman, age 66 y. Because homesigners do not share a language with the experimenters, any failures on our tasks might have been a result of our inability to successfully communicate the goal of the task, rather than to the homesigners lack of conceptual knowledge. To address this concern, the first author, who knows no sign language, tested the deaf ASL signers using the same gestures and techniques she used to convey the task goals to the homesigners. Results We first asked whether homesigners were familiar enough with their society s moneyed economy to make correct judgments about monetary values. We designed a series of tasks to assess their recognition of currency (shown, for example, by gesturing a five and two zeroes for a 500-unit bill); their ability to compare the relative value of the currency (shown, for example, by determining whether a 10-unit or a 20-unit bill has more value); and their ability to compare coins and bills of different currency type (shown, for example, by determining whether a set of nine 10-unit coins has more or less value than a 100-unit bill). All four homesigners identified money correctly and could assess its relative value, and three of the four homesigners performed with Author contributions: E.S., M.C., E.S.S., S.E.C., and S.G.-M. designed research; E.S. and M.C. performed research; E.S. analyzed data; and E.S., M.C., E.S.S., S.E.C., and S.G.-M. wrote the paper. Q:4; 5 The authors declare no conflict of interest. Q:6 1 To whom correspondence should be addressed. scarey@wjh.harvard.edu. This article contains supporting information online at /pnas /-/DCSupplemental. *Some have suggested that the Pirahã have words for one and two (2); however, other work suggests that the meanings of these words are not exact, but approximate (3). SOCIAL SCIENCES PNAS Early Edition 1of6

2 greater than chance accuracy on all monetary tasks (SI Text provides more information). Next, we asked whether homesigners used their gestures to express number in spontaneous communication outside of a monetary context. We presented 10 short animated stories in which number was critical to the plot, asking them to retell the stories to a relative or friend who had not watched the vignette but who was familiar with the storyteller s homesign. All four homesigners extended their fingers to indicate the number of objects in the vignettes (Fig. 1 Upper). We then asked whether these gestures encoded exact cardinal values. As the number of objects grew, so did the average number of fingers the homesigners extended, but the number of fingers was only sometimes exactly correct (Fig. 1 Lower). Homesigners thus used gesture to track the approximate values of sets rather than the exact values, at least in their narratives. To determine whether homesigners used gesture accurately in tasks designed to elicit exact number, we showed them cards depicting different numbers of items and asked them to report how many items were on each card, without (Fig. 2A) and with (Fig. 2C) time pressure (15, 16). On the time-unlimited version (presented first), if the participants held up the wrong number of fingers on an item, the experimenter indicated that their response was incorrect and repeated the trial, often helping them get to the correct answer by grouping the objects, by covering sets of objects, or by pointing to individual objects. This procedure was used to ensure that the homesigners understood that we wanted the exact number of items, not an approximation. We report the first response to each target item, before the participant received help from the experimenter on that item. On the time-limited version, only approximations were possible. Homesigners were 100% accurate on target sets of one, two, and three for both time-unlimited (Fig. 2A) and time-limited (Fig. 2B) versions of the task. However, they performed significantly less well on target sets greater than three on both versions, coming close to the value of the target number but achieving the exactly correct value on fewer than half the trials. They produced exactly correct gestures on only 44% [standard error (SE), 8%] of the time-unlimited trials and 31% (SE, 4%) of the time-limited trials involving sets greater than three. These performance levels on large sets were significantly lower than those on small sets for the time-unlimited and time-limited trials [t(3) = (P = 0.006) and t(3) = (P = ), respectively, two-tailed pairedsamples t tests]. The homesigners performance on large sets (>3) in the time-limited condition was marginally worse than their performance in the time-unlimited condition [31% vs. 44%, twotailed paired-samples t test, t(3) = 2.093, P = 0.12]. The unschooled hearing control subjects and the signing deaf control subjects also performed perfectly on small target sets for both time-unlimited (Fig. 2 C and E) and time-limited (Fig. 2 D and F) trials. However, unlike the homesigners, they also performed well on sets greater than three on the time-unlimited trials when they had as much time as they wanted and could count. A mixed models logistic regression revealed a main effect of participant type: homesigners were significantly less accurate on sets greater than three than both the unschooled hearing control subjects and the signing deaf control subjects (both P < 0.001); the two control groups did not differ from each other (P = 0.174). On the time-limited trials, on which everyone was forced to estimate, overall performance across groups dropped on sets greater than three: 31% correct for homesigners, 34% for hearing controls, and 50% for signing deaf controls. A mixed-models logistic regression revealed no significant difference in accuracy between homesigners and the hearing controls (P = 0.586), or between the two control groups (P = 0.159). We did find a significant difference in accuracy between homesigners and the signing deaf controls (P < 0.05); one of the two signers was a particularly good estimator and estimated perfectly on sets as large as 11. Moreover, although all three groups were more accurate on the time-unlimited task than the time-limited task for sets greater than three, the mixed-models logistic regression showed an interaction between task condition and participant type: homesigners improvement was significantly less than the unschooled hearing control subjects (P < 0.001) and less than the signing deaf control subjects (P = 0.037). The signers improvement was also significantly less than the hearing control subjects (P = 0.041) because the signers did so well on the time-limited task that there was little room left for improvement when time was unlimited. The homesigners inability to provide exactly correct values might mean that they do not know that each set has a unique exact value, and that finger gestures can represent this value. Alternatively, they might know that each set has an exact value, but lack an effective technique for determining or representing that value, Fig. 1. Spontaneous communication about number. Upper: A homesigner describing a vignette in which 10 sheep (Left) standin(center) a pen (Right). Note that the homesigner incorrectly extended nine fingers to describe the number of sheep. Lower: The number of fingers the homesigners extended (y axis) as a function of the number of objects actually shown in the vignette (x axis). Because not all participants produced an equal number of gestures in the stories, the weighted average correlation coefficientisshown. In fact, homesigners were 100% accurate on both versions of the card task for sets of four, a number that is within the subitizable range for adults and, on those grounds, could be classifiedas a small (rather thanalarge) number. Wecategorizedfour as alarge number to facilitate comparison with data from the Pirahã (2). Moreover, removing four from the large number category in the homesigners data would further depress their success rates for large numbers, which would serve only to strengthen the patterns we report. In addition to overall performance, evidence that the homesigners did not view the time-unlimited task as a request for approximate values comes from their spikes of accuracy at targets of 15 and 20 in the time-limited condition (which clearly required estimation), but not in the time-unlimited condition in which homesigners were no more accurate on 15 and 20 than on 14, 16, or 19. When estimating in the time-limited condition, participants often round in this case to the values given by whole hand gestures but in the time-unlimited condition, they seemed to be attempting exact responses. 2of6 Spaepen et al.

3 A Responses on the card task Time-Unlimited Presentation T i me-limited Presentation Homesigners B C Unschooled Hearing Controls D E Signing Deaf Controls F SOCIAL SCIENCES Fig. 2. Elicited communication about sets containing different numbers of items. Responses given by the three test groups when asked to describe cards containing different numbers of items under two conditions: (A, C, and E) time-unlimited presentation (which could be solved by counting) and (B, D, andf) time-limited presentation (which had to be solved by estimating). The average correlation coefficient is shown for each condition. particularly for large sets. That homesigners did better on timeunlimited than time-limited trials for large sets is consistent with the possibility that they understood they were to represent exact number, but just had noisy strategies for doing so. To distinguish these possibilities, the experimenter put a number of objects (n =3 20) in an opaque box; extended fingers to indicate the number of objects; transformed the array, changing the number of objects or not; and then asked the homesigner to report the number of objects currently in the box (17). All four homesigners performed well on this task (Fig. 3). After transformations that did not change the number of objects, homesigners produced the number gesture they originally saw on 97% (SE, 3.3%) of trials. After transformations that did change number, homesigners never produced the original number gesture [two-tailed paired-samples t test comparing trials that did and did not change number, t(3) = 29.08; P < ]. They understood that these transformations changed number, and that the gesture used to describe the quantity had to change as well. Furthermore, they adjusted their gestures in the right direction on 92.5% of trials. Homesigners thus understand that each set has an exact numerical value, and that the gesture representing it must represent a smaller set if items are removed, and a larger set if items are added. However, they do not have an errorless way of arriving at a gestural representation for that new value, at least when dealing with large sets. However, what if a gesture response is not required? Homesigners might, under these circumstances, not only display an understanding of the concept of exact cardinal value but also Fig. 3. Elicited communication about sets that do and do not change in number. Graph displays how often homesigners gave back the number gesture they were shown originally after transformations that did change number (two bars on right: removing one object, doubling the number of objects) and transformations that did not change number (three bars on left: adding back the one object that was taken away, leaving the objects alone, stirring the objects). Error bars indicate SE. Spaepen et al. PNAS Early Edition 3of6

4 demonstrate an ability to arrive at exact numerical values. The next study explores this possibility. We administered six match-to-sample tasks comparable to tasks used to assess the Pirahã s grasp of number concepts (2, 3): three intramodal tasks (two visually presented tasks, one tactilely presented) and three cross-modal tasks (requiring a response in a different modality from the target). Homesigners performance resembled the performance of the Pirahã: high accuracy (93% ± 3.8%) on small sets of one, two, and three; lower accuracy (33% ± 5.1%) on sets greater than three [two-tailed pairedsamples t test, t(3) = , P = 0.002]. The unschooled hearing control subjects and the signing deaf control subjects also performed well on small sets of one, two, and three (100% accuracy). However, unlike the homesigners, they excelled on sets larger than three (91% and 94%, respectively) in which they could (and did) count. A mixed-models logistic regression revealed a main effect of participant type: homesigners were less accurate on sets greater than three than the hearing and deaf control subjects (both P < 0.001), and the two control groups did not differ (P = 0.474). Importantly, the homesigners average responses to each target centered on the target value and thus were approximately, but not exactly, correct (Fig. 4; SI Text includes graphs of the control groups performance). A closer look at the R 2 values in Fig. 4 indicates that homesigners incorrect responses came closer to the correct target value in some conditions than in others. In fact, in Fig. 4A, the visible object matching condition, although they were correct on only 61% of trials for sets larger than, their R 2 value was 0.994, which means that their incorrect responses were only on or two off from the target, even at the largest target sets. The homesigners could have arrived at the exactly correct value by lining up the response objects next to the target objects. Instead, they used their fingers to establish one-to-one correspondence with the objects in the target set, and then used those fingers to decide how many objects should be in the response set. This strategy ought to help in the condition in which the objects were hidden (Fig. 4B) and, indeed, the homesigners R 2 value on this condition was also quite high, at (although not as high as when the objects were visible, presumably because the homesigners could not go back and check their work when the objects were hidden). Note that making the number of items in a response set exactly equal to the number in a target set is particularly difficult when the items are presented sequentially, as sequential targets do not persist in time or space (Fig. 4 C and F). The unschooled hearing and signing deaf control subjects always counted on these trials. If homesigners are using gesture as a general count routine, we might expect them to resort to fingers on these particularly difficult match-to-sample tasks. Contrary to expectations, however, no homesigner spontaneously used fingers for the sequentially presented tactile items. Using fingers to index objects appears to be a strategy that the homesigners have developed to deal with visible arrays of objects (indeed, this strategy may account for their near-perfect performance through 10 on the time-unlimited condition of the card task; Fig. 2). However, the insight that fingers can be aligned in one-to-one correspondence with visible sets did not bring with it the insight that one-to-one correspondence guarantees numerical equivalence. The homesigners did not deploy the finger strategy when it would have been most useful (matching sequential sets), nor did they use one-to-one correspondence in its simplest form (pairing the items in the response set with the items in the visible target set). Discussion We have found that homesigners, who are not exposed to a conventional numerical system but who live in and are adept at INTRA-MODAL TAS KS CROS S-MODAL TAS KS A Visual Presentation (Uncovered), D Visual Presentation (Uncovered), Visual Response Tactile Response B Visual Presentation (Covered), E Visual Presentation (Covered), Visual Response Tactile Response C Tactile Presentation F Tactile Presentation, Tactile Response Visual Response Fig. 4. Number in noncommunicative tasks. The graphs display the homesigners responses on the six match-to-sample tasks: intramodal tasks (presentation and response in the same modality; Left) and cross-modal tasks (presentation and response in different modalities; Right). The function expressing the best Q:10 linear fit is shown for each task. 4of6 Spaepen et al.

5 navigating an otherwise numerate culture, use gesture to communicate about number. They also appreciate that a set of objects has an exact cardinal value, and that a unique gesture communicates that value. Thus, unlike the Pirahã and Mundurukú, who do not use their fingers to communicate or reason about number, the homesigners cultural environment seems to support communication about number (even exact number), recognition of exact numerosity, and quite accurate reasoning within the domain of money. However, despite the fact that homesigners use their fingers to communicate about number, they do not consistently produce gestures that accurately represent the cardinal values of sets containing more than three items. Moreover, they cannot reliably make the number of items in a second set match the number in a target set if the sets contain more than three items. Under certain circumstances, they can use their fingers to establish one-to-one correspondence and thus achieve greater accuracy than they would have with pure approximation, but they do not make general use of this strategy (in, for example, sequential sets). Our results raise two important questions regarding (i) what aspects of number representations homesigners lack and (ii) why homesigners have these deficits. Homesigners may lack stable summary symbols for each integer symbols that stand for the cardinal value of the entire set, not just individuals within a set (fingers are easily, perhaps too easily, mapped onto individuals). They may also lack the principle of the successor function that each natural number n has a successor that is exactly n + 1. That is, homesigners number gestures are not embedded in a count routine. In addition, homesigners may fail to appreciate that oneto-one correspondence guarantees numerical equivalence. That is, homesigners number gestures are not used as a tally system. With respect to why, several possibilities remain open. Exposure to a linguistic system that contains a count routine may be essential to develop representations of exact number (4, 6). But other aspects of language could also play a role (e.g., by providing rules for combining expressions recursively; providing evidence that numerals are quantifiers; providing stable symbols to overcome working memory limitations). Moreover, nonlinguistic representational and computational resources (e.g., tally systems, Arabic numerals, abacus) have the potential to lead to flexible, domain-general representations of large exact numbers. In sum, we have found that adults who do not have conventional language but are otherwise integrated into a numerate social and cultural world have difficulty generating exact values for sets larger than three. A cultural context in which exact number representations are valued, and a social context in which one s communicative partners share a counting routine and an associated system of exact number concepts, are not enough to scaffold the creation of a count routine or representations of exact number that are flexible and generalize across domains. Materials and Methods Number Narrative. The vignettes, piloted with American hearing children to ensure that they elicited talk about number, were organized into two sets of Q:8 10 that were identical except for the numbers of objects or actions (SI Text). The experimenter played each vignette to the homesigner once in the presence of a relative or friend (the recipient), who was able to communicate with the homesigner and could not see the computer screen. The experimenter then encouraged the homesigner to relay the vignette events to the recipient. The homesigner could rewatch the vignette at any time. If the homesigner did not mention the number of objects or actions in the story, the experimenter encouraged the recipient to ask about them. All homesigners required this for the first story, and very rarely thereafter; recipients also spontaneously started asking for numerical clarification if it was not provided in the first retelling of the story by the homesigner. Homesigners were given one set of vignettes at the beginning of testing and the second set near the end of all testing ( 24 h later). The order of presentation was counter-balanced. The current data are from the first set and reflect the numerical gestures used before homesigners intensive work on the other numerical tasks. Card Task. Time-unlimited condition. Participants saw four sets of eight cards, each of which depicted between one and 30 items. Each set showed a different kind of object;the card depicting one item in each set was presented first. We limited our analysis to the targets from one to 20 (24 of 32 trials). In the timeunlimited condition, the participant had as much time as he or she required to assess the number of objects. The experimenter presented cards with items of the same type on a page and asked what was on the card by shrugging with a questioning facial expression. Most participants labeled the item (e.g., if the card showed one ball, the homesigners produced their gesture for ball, the hearing controls said the Spanish word, and the signers used the ASL sign). For the homesigners and the signers, the experimenter then nodded and gestured one (holding up one index finger, the gesture all homesigners used spontaneously for one in the vignette task). For the hearing controls, the experimenter nodded and said una pelota. Participants often imitated the experimenter s gesture or word. The experimenter then presented the remaining cards in a fixed random order. All participants readily understood the task and responded with numerical gestures or words. If participants first responses were incorrect, they often received a second or third chance with help from the experimenter, who pointed to each object or covered some items to break the larger sets into more manageable units. This procedure also ensured that the participants, particularly the homesigners, understood that the experimenter expected an exact enumeration of the objects, not an estimate. The current data represent the homesigners first response to each card, and do not include any responses produced after participants received this kind of support on the item. Time-limited condition. The experimenter showed the card for 1 2 s, turned it over, and then asked the participant to respond. Participants thus had to estimate the number of objects. If participants asked to see the card again, the experimenter showed it a second time for 1 2 s. All participants readily produced number hand shapes or verbal number responses. All participants received the time-unlimited version first to orient them to the task and to ensure that the time-limited version, which required estimation, did not suggest that estimation was being elicited in the time-unlimited version. Assessment of Exact Numerosity. In the assessment of exact numerosity (17), the experimenter placed in a box a number of items ranging from three to 20. Participants saw five transformations for each quantity: two that changed the number of objects in the box (removing one object; doubling the number of objects), and three that did not change the original number (adding back the one object that was taken away; leaving the objects alone; stirring the objects). Transformations were presented in random order, with the exception that subtract-one and add-one-back always occurred in immediate succession. The double transformation was presented too rapidly for exact enumeration, but the experimenter showed the participant that one object was being removed or added in the subtract-one and add-oneback transformations. Two training trials were given with the starting number of two in the nochange and double transformations. All participants answered correctly. Test trials used three, six, seven, nine, and 20 as the starting numbers, presented in a random order. All transformations were performed on each starting number. Responses reproducing the original number gesture were coded as correct on the no-change, stir, and add-one-back transformations, and as incorrect on the subtract-one and double transformations. Numerical Matching. There were six matching tasks. The three intramodal tasks were (i) one visual task with disks that were visible during the entire trial; (ii) one visual task with disks that were covered when participants began building their response set; and (iii) one tactile task in which participants had to match the number of times the experimenter knocked on their fists with their own knocks on her fist. In the three intermodal tasks, participants: (iv) produced knocks in response to visible disks; (v) produced knocks in response to hidden disks; and (vi) gave a set of disks equal to the number of knocks on their fist. The order of presentation of tasks varied across participants, although each received the uncovered visual match task first. Visual matching (uncovered). In uncovered visual matching tasks, the experimenter and the participant each had a large number of white poker chips. Participants received two training trials in which the experimenter created target sets of one and then two chips. Leaving the array in view, the experimenter encouraged participants to create an identical array with their disks. Every participant readily understood the task; no training trial was repeated. Test trials were conducted in the same manner. Target arrays were one, two, three, six, eight, 10, 15, and 20, presented in a fixed, random order. For SOCIAL SCIENCES Spaepen et al. PNAS Early Edition 5of6

6 larger sets (15 and 20), target sets were placed in two rows, usually of seven and eight for 15, and 10 and 10 for 20. Nonnumerical factors were confounded with number: larger sets had longer line length and more total surface area. Visual matching (covered). The uncovered visual matching condition was identical to the uncovered visual match condition, except that the experimenter covered her target array as soon as participants began building their own array. Participants were given as much time as they required to assess the quantity of the target array. Targets used the same values as the uncovered visual matches, but were presented in a different random order. Tactile matching. In the tactile matching task, the experimenter knocked participants fists a number of times and instructed them to do the same to her fist. Because of the added task demands of tracking sequential events, training trials were given as for the uncovered visual matching task. Participants who failed the two-knock training trial received feedback that their response was incorrect and the trial was repeated. All such participants passed the second trial. Target sets were one, two, three, four, six, eight, 10, 15, and sometimes 20, presented in a fixed, random order. Continuous quantities were again confounded with number; the larger the set, the longer the duration of the experimenter s knocking. With two of the more capable participants, we also attempted this task using toe taps instead of fist knocks to free the homesigners hands; neither participant used his hands, and neither was more accurate with toe taps than with fist knocks. Cross-modal conditions. The three cross-modal conditions were cross-modal visual to tactile match (target left uncovered), cross-modal visual to tactile match (target covered), and cross-modal tactile to visual match. Target sets were the same as in the other tasks, and were presented in novel fixed, random orders. Coding. All data were coded by the first author and reliability was coded by a blind coder. In all cases, reliability was very high. For the homesigners, agreement between coders was 99% on the money task (SI Text), 96% in the narrative task, 98.5% in both conditions of the card task, 100% in the exact numerosity task, and 97% on the numerical matching task. For the unschooled hearing control subjects, agreement between coders was 100% (money), 98.4% (cards), and 98.9% (numerical matching). For the signing deaf control subjects, agreement between coders was 99.0% (cards) and 100% (numerical matching). Disagreements were easily resolved by rewatching the trial; all cases were notation errors. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. We thank J. Huttenlocher, S. Levine, and F. Spaepen for comments. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health/ National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders Grant R01 DC00491 (to E.S., M.C., and S.G.-M.) and a Science of Learning Grant from the National Science Foundation (to E.S., M.C., and S.G.-M.). E.S. and S.C. also received funding from the National Science Foundation. 1. Pica P, Lemer C, Izard V, Dehaene S (2004) Exact and approximate arithmetic in an Amazonian indigene group. Science 306: Gordon P (2004) Numerical cognition without words: Evidence from Amazonia. Science 306: Frank MC, Everett DL, Fedorenko E, Gibson E (2008) Number as a cognitive technology: Evidence from Pirahã language and cognition. Cognition 108: Carey S (2009) The Origin of Concepts (Oxford University Press, New York). 5. Spelke ES (2000) Core knowledge. Am Psychol 55: Hurford J (1987) Language and Number: The Emergence of a Cognitive System (Blackwell Press, Oxford, UK). 7. Gelman R, Gallistel CR (2004) Language and the origin of numerical concepts. Science 306: Gelman R, Butterworth B (2005) Number and language: How are they related? Trends Cogn Sci 9: Hale K (1975) Linguistics and Anthropology: In Honor of C.F. Voegelin, eds Hale K, Q:9 Werner O (Peter De Ridder Press, Lisse, The Netherlands), pp Goldin-Meadow S (2003) The Resilience of Language (Psychology Press, New York). 11. Goldin-Meadow S, Feldman H (1977) The development of language-like communication without a language model. Science 197: Goldin-Meadow S, Mylander C (1983) Gestural communication in deaf children: noneffect of parental input on language development. Science 221: Goldin-Meadow S, Mylander C (1998) Spontaneous sign systems created by deaf children in two cultures. Nature 391: Coppola M, Newport EL (2005) Grammatical subjects in home sign: Abstract linguistic structure in adult primary gesture systems without linguistic input. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 102: Gelman R (1993) Learning and Motivation, ed Medin D (Academic Press, New York), Vol 30, pp Le Corre M, Van de Walle G, Brannon EM, Carey S (2006) Re-visiting the competence/ performance debate in the acquisition of the counting principles. Cognit Psychol 52: Lipton JS, Spelke ES (2006) Preschool children master the logic of number word meanings. Cognition 98:B57 B66. 6of6 Spaepen et al.

7 AUTHOR QUERIES AUTHOR PLEASE ANSWER ALL QUERIES 1 Q: 1_Please contact PNAS_Specialist.djs@sheridan.com if you have questions about the editorial changes, this list of queries, or the figures in your article. Please include your manuscript number in the subject line of all correspondence; your manuscript number is Please (i) review the author affiliation and footnote symbols carefully, (ii) check the order of the author names, and (iii) check the spelling of all author names and affiliations. Please indicate that the author and affiliation lines are correct by adding the comment OK next to the author line. Please note that this is your opportunity to correct errors in your article prior to publication. Corrections requested after online publication will be considered and processed as errata. Q: 2_If your article contains links to Web sites (other than the SI links for your article), please verify that the links are valid and will direct readers to the proper Web page. Q: 3_PNAS allows up to five key terms that (i) do not repeat terms present in the title or abstract (which are searchable online) and (ii) do not include nonstandard abbreviations. Because we prefer to avoid publishing a single key term, please add at least one more term (and specify your preferred order in which the terms should appear) or delete the key terms entirely. Q: 4_Please review the information in the author contribution footnote carefully. Please make sure that the information is correct and that the correct author initials are listed. Note that the order of author initials matches the order of the author line per journal style. You may add contributions to the list in the footnote; however, funding should not be an author s only contribution to the work. Q: 5_You will receive a notification from the PNAS ebill system in 1-2 days. Each corresponding author is required to log in to the system and provide payment information for applicable publication charges (purchase order number or credit card information) upon receipt of the notification. You will have the opportunity to order reprints through the ebill system if desired, as well. Failure to log in and provide the required information may result in publication delays. Q: 6_Reminder: You have chosen not to pay an additional $1275 (or $950 if your institution has a site license) for the PNAS Open Access option. Q: 7_Please verify that all supporting information (SI) citations are correct. Note, however, that the hyperlinks for SI citations will not work until the article is published online. In addition, SI that is not composed in the main SI PDF (appendices, datasets, movies, and Other Supporting Information Files ) have not been changed from your originally submitted file and so are not included in this set of proofs. The proofs for any composed portion of your SI are included in this proof as subsequent pages following the last page of the main text. If you did not receive the proofs for your SI, please contact PNAS_Specialist.djs@sheridan.com. Q: 8_Please note the generic SI Text callouts per PNAS style. If any numbered SI element is called out specifically, all numbered SI elements need to be called out specifically. You may add specific callouts for Figs. S1-S3 and Table S1.

8 AUTHOR QUERIES AUTHOR PLEASE ANSWER ALL QUERIES 2 Q: 9_Please provide chapter title in ref. 9. Q: 10_Please provide description of parts A F in Fig. 4.

9 Supporting Information Spaepen et al /pnas Q:1 SI Text Participants. Of the four participants tested, one participant, age 24 y, attended a school at which Nicaraguan Sign Language was used for a total of 23 wk over the course of 3 y, starting at age 17 y. Despite this exposure, he still communicated exclusively through homesign. The relatives and friends whom we used as informants and recipients during data collection all knew the homesigners particular gesture systems well enough to communicate with them. Although the homesigners generally did not have medical records, they have no known cognitive deficits. The hearing controls were all female, three of whom live in Managua, and a fourth who lives in the city of Estelí, north of Managua. None of the hearing controls had any extensive contact with signers or homesigners. None of the participants had been to school for any period. The first deaf control subject was a 69-y-old man who was immersed in an ASL environment at 4 y of age (at a residential school for deaf children). He has a bachelor s degree. The second deaf control subject was a 66-y-old woman who attended oral deaf schools in which ASL was not used. However, at approximately age 9 y she was exposed to ASL through schoolmates who had signing relatives. She completed secondary school. Both participants received intensive oral training; their written English is at approximately a high school level. To test the homesigners other cognitive functions, we administered a spatial reasoning task to them and all of the family members who were present for the testing. The task was a mental rotation task, in which the participant must choose one of four shapes to complete a square that has a piece cut out of it (1). Homesigners performed as well as their family members and friends. Homesigners had an average of questions of 32 correct, and their relatives had an average of 21.5 of 32 correct. These scores were not significantly different from one another (independent-samples t test, t(10) = 0.437, P = 0.671). Knowledge of Monetary Value. Because this task was administered on the computer, we first had the participants identify computer depictions (pictures) of the coins and bills of Nicaraguan currency [coins of 10, 25, 50, 1 Cordoba (C$1), and C$5, and bills of C$10, C$20, C$50, C$100, and C$500]. We presented an image of each of these coins or bills one at a time and asked the homesigner to tell us what it was. All homesigners could indicate the value of each coin or bill, all of which display their values in Arabic numerals, using finger gestures to indicate the number of Cordobas or cents it was worth. For small values through 20, homesigners indicated the value with a number of fingers equal to the number of units (e.g., they held up 10 fingers for a C$10 bill). They generally made no distinction between cents and Cordobas, meaning they held up 10 fingers for a 10 coin as well as a C$10 bill. All of the homesigners indicated the 50 coin by calling it one half, that is, by doing a bisection gesture to the index finger of their other hand. For a C$50 bill, three of the four homesigners held up a five and a zero, imitating the Arabic numerals on the bill. One homesigner, subject S04, indicated it by holding up a five and then doing four iterations of a 10 hand shape, presumably intending to hold up five sets of 10. All four homesigners indicated C$100 and C$500 by imitating the Arabic digits on the bill: and 5-0-0, respectively. The coins vary in size according to value (i.e., the largest coin is worth the most) and the bills are each distinct colors. In the first which is more forced choice task, single coins or bills were presented on each side to ensure that the homesigners knew the relative value of these coins and bills. The hearing controls were all perfect on this task. The homesigners also performed extremely well on this task. Two homesigners completed all nine comparisons correctly on the first try, and two completed eight of the nine comparisons correctly. In the first trial, both mistook a 50 coin to be a C$5 coin and therefore indicated it was worth more than a C$1 coin. They both changed their answer when asked to identify the 50 coin. In the second version of which is more task, participants saw 40 trials, each of which contained two sets of coins or bills. In this task, the coins on each side of the comparison were all of one kind, but homesigners had to compare across types of coins or bills. There were four types of trials, ranging in difficulty, as follows: Type I, which included four trials, showed small numbers of bills or coins of the same denomination. These were controls to make sure homesigners were on task (e.g., two C$5C coins vs. three C$5C coins). Type II, which included 12 trials, showed small numbers of bills or coins of different denominations (e.g., three C$20 bills vs. one C$50 bill, two C$5 coins vs. three C$10 bills). Type III, which included 12 trials, showed large numbers of bills or coins of different denominations with a small monetary difference between sides (e.g., six C$5 coins vs. two C$20 bills, seven C$10 bills vs. four C$20 bills). Type IV, which included 12 trials, showed large numbers of bills or coins of different denominations with a large monetary difference between sides, always at a 1:2 or 2:3 ratio (e.g., 10 C$10 bills vs. two C$100 bills, 12 C$5 bills vs. three C$10 bills). Trials of different types were interspersed in a quasi-random fixed order. Side of the winner, the larger number of coins being the winner, and the larger denomination being the winner were all counterbalanced across trials within each type. Moreover, within each type, homesigners saw four trials that compared coins to coins, four trials that compared bills to coins, and four trials that compared bills to bills. Fig. 1 indicates the homesigners and the unschooled hearing controls performance on this task. Both groups did quite well. The hearing controls were far above chance on all trial types (one-sample t tests: all P < 0.01). The homesigners were above or marginally above chance on all trial types except type III [onesample t tests: type I, t(3) = 7.00, P < 0.01; type II, t(3) = 3.323, P < 0.05; type III, t(3) = 2.211, P = 0.114; type IV, t(3) = 2.920, P = 0.06]. These results indicate that the homesigners understand some Arabic notation from money, and know how money varies in value, but, as a group, they struggle most with trials that require close comparisons of large numbers of bills or coins, trials on which the hearing controls did very well. However, performance on this task varied widely among participants. One homesigner got every single trial correct, whereas another homesigner was at chance level for trial types II, III, and IV. These two homesigners did not differ from each other, nor from the other two homesigners, on the other tasks reported in this study. Apparently whatever strategies allowed some success with money did not reflect robust representations of exact cardinal values. 1. Levine SC, Vasilyeva M, Lourenco SF, Newcombe NS, Huttenlocher J (2005) Socioeconomic status modifies the sex difference in spatial skill. Psychol Sci 16: Spaepen et al. 1of3

10 Fig. S1. Homesigners and unschooled hearing control subjects performance on the monetary reasoning task. Q:2 Fig. S2. Number in noncommunicative tasks. The graphs display the unschooled hearing controls responses on the six match-to-sample tasks. Intramodal tasks (presentation and response in the same modality) are on the left; cross-modal tasks (presentation and response in different modalities) are on the right. The function expressing the best linear fit is shown for each task. Spaepen et al. 2of3

11 Q:3 Fig. S3. Number in noncommunicative tasks. The graphs show the signing deaf control subjects responses on the six match-to-sample tasks. Intramodal tasks Q:4 (presentation and response in the same modality) are on the left; cross-modal tasks (presentation and response in different modalities) are on the right. The function expressing the best linear fit is shown for each task. Table S1. Description of all 10 vignettes used in the number narrative task Vignette First set Second set 1 2 elephants enter. 1 elephant enters. 2 1 bear sits on chair, falls off its chair. 2 bears sit on chairs, each falls off its chair 1 at a time. 3 8 monkeys enter one by one, 7 holding bananas, all 7 eat bananas simultaneously, 7 leave one by one, 1 monkey without bananas stays at end. 7 monkeys enter one by one, 4 holding bananas, 4 eat bananas simultaneously, 4 leave one by one, 3 monkeys without bananas stay at end. 4 4 flower boxes, 1 flower grows out of 3 of them, 2 small ones grow out of 1 box (5 total). 6 flower boxes, 2 flowers grow out of 5 of them, 1 large one grows out of 1 box (11 total). 5 5 cups on table, each filled with juice one at a time (3 orange, 2 red), then 2 fall over one at a time. 6 cups on table, each filled with juice one at a time (3 orange, 3 red), then 3 fall over one at a time. 6 8 frogs on lily pads, 4 jump away all at once, 2 come back one at a time. 12 frogs on lily pads, 5 jump away all at once, 3 come back one at a time sheep in a pen, 5 leave the pen, 1 gets killed by a wolf, 4 return to the pen. 10 sheep in a pen, 3 leave the pen, 1 gets killed by a wolf, 2 return to the pen. 8 6 ice cream cones are out, teddy bear enters 6 times, going to each cone one time. Teddy bear eats 3 ice creams (leaves cones), leaves 3 uneaten. Bear stays by last cone, doesn t eat it. 9 Cup with juice and 6 straws in it. 6 birds come in one at a time, each drinks from a different straw, very little liquid left in cup at end. 10 First man shoots an orange basketball through a hoop 9 times, then leaves. Second man enters, shoots a yellow basketball through hoop 8 times. Both sets are represented here: two participants saw the first set of vignettes and two saw the second set. 6 ice cream cones are out, teddy bear enters 6 times, going to each cone one time. Teddy bear eats 5 ice creams (leaves cones), leaves 1 uneaten. Bear stays by last cone, doesn t eat it. Cup with juice and 5 straws in it. 5 birds come in one at a time, each drinks from a different straw, very little liquid left in cup at end. First man shoots an orange basketball through a hoop 5 times, then leaves. Second man enters, shoots a yellow basketball through hoop 10 times. Spaepen et al. 3of3

American Sign Language I: Unit 1 Review

American Sign Language I: Unit 1 Review HI, HELLO NAME WHAT? WHO? WHERE? It s nice to meet you. (directional) MAN WOMAN PERSON SHIRT PANTS JACKET, COAT DRESS (noun) SKIRT SHOES HAT CLOTHES GLASSES HAIR BEARD MUSTACHE REMEMBER FORGET LETTER NUMBER

More information

About Privacy Policy Contact Us. Science Magazine SCIENCE DAILY NEWS

About Privacy Policy Contact Us. Science Magazine SCIENCE DAILY NEWS of 8 4/7/20 9:00 AM About Privacy Policy Contact Us Science Magazine SCIENCE DAILY NEWS Home Health & Medicine Gadgets Space Matter & Energy Mind & Brain Plants & Animals Ads by Google Learning Children

More information

Birds' Judgments of Number and Quantity

Birds' Judgments of Number and Quantity Entire Set of Printable Figures For Birds' Judgments of Number and Quantity Emmerton Figure 1. Figure 2. Examples of novel transfer stimuli in an experiment reported in Emmerton & Delius (1993). Paired

More information

PELLISSIPPI STATE TECHNICAL COMMUNITY COLLEGE MASTER SYLLABUS BEGINNING AMERICAN SIGN LANGUAGE I ASL 1010

PELLISSIPPI STATE TECHNICAL COMMUNITY COLLEGE MASTER SYLLABUS BEGINNING AMERICAN SIGN LANGUAGE I ASL 1010 PELLISSIPPI STATE TECHNICAL COMMUNITY COLLEGE MASTER SYLLABUS BEGINNING AMERICAN SIGN LANGUAGE I ASL 1010 Class Hours: 3.0 Credit Hours: 3.0 Laboratory Hours: 0.0 Date Revised: Summer 01 Catalog Course

More information

Response to Comment on Log or Linear? Distinct Intuitions of the Number Scale in Western and Amazonian Indigene Cultures

Response to Comment on Log or Linear? Distinct Intuitions of the Number Scale in Western and Amazonian Indigene Cultures Response to Comment on Log or Linear? Distinct Intuitions of the Number Scale in Western and Amazonian Indigene Cultures The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this

More information

Content Scope & Sequence

Content Scope & Sequence Content Scope & Sequence GRADE 2 scottforesman.com (800) 552-2259 Copyright Pearson Education, Inc. 0606443 1 Counting, Coins, and Combinations Counting, Coins, and Combinations (Addition, Subtraction,

More information

MA 1 Notes. Deaf vs deaf p. 3 MA1 F 13

MA 1 Notes. Deaf vs deaf p. 3 MA1 F 13 Name Period MA 1 Notes Fingerspelling Consider frngerspelling to be like your handwriting. Being clear is vital to being understood, be confident enough not to worry, whether each letter is exactly right,

More information

SMS USA PHASE ONE SMS USA BULLETIN BOARD FOCUS GROUP: MODERATOR S GUIDE

SMS USA PHASE ONE SMS USA BULLETIN BOARD FOCUS GROUP: MODERATOR S GUIDE SMS USA PHASE ONE SMS USA BULLETIN BOARD FOCUS GROUP: MODERATOR S GUIDE DAY 1: GENERAL SMOKING QUESTIONS Welcome to our online discussion! My name is Lisa and I will be moderating the session over the

More information

MA 1 Notes. moving the hand may be needed.

MA 1 Notes. moving the hand may be needed. Name Period MA 1 Notes Fingerspelling Consider frngerspelling to be like your. Being clear is vital to being understood, be enough not to worry, whether each letter is exactly right, and be able to spell

More information

Mental abacus represents large exact numerosities using pre-existing visual resources. Michael C. Frank 1 and David Barner 2

Mental abacus represents large exact numerosities using pre-existing visual resources. Michael C. Frank 1 and David Barner 2 Page of Manuscript under review for Psychological Science 0 0 0 0 0 Mental abacus represents large exact numerosities using pre-existing visual resources Michael C. Frank and David Barner Department of

More information

Cochrane Breast Cancer Group

Cochrane Breast Cancer Group Cochrane Breast Cancer Group Version and date: V3.2, September 2013 Intervention Cochrane Protocol checklist for authors This checklist is designed to help you (the authors) complete your Cochrane Protocol.

More information

JOHN C. THORNE, PHD, CCC-SLP UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH & HEARING SCIENCE FETAL ALCOHOL SYNDROME DIAGNOSTIC AND PREVENTION NETWORK

JOHN C. THORNE, PHD, CCC-SLP UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH & HEARING SCIENCE FETAL ALCOHOL SYNDROME DIAGNOSTIC AND PREVENTION NETWORK OPTIMIZING A CLINICAL LANGUAGE MEASURE FOR USE IN IDENTIFYING SIGNIFICANT NEURODEVELOPMENTAL IMPAIRMENT IN DIAGNOSIS OF FETAL ALCOHOL SPECTRUM DISORDERS (FASD) JOHN C. THORNE, PHD, CCC-SLP UNIVERSITY OF

More information

Grammaticalization of points in Nicaraguan signing

Grammaticalization of points in Nicaraguan signing Grammaticalization of points in Nicaraguan signing Marie Coppola University of Connecticut Departments of Psychology and Linguistics Ann Senghas Barnard College of Columbia University Department of Psychology

More information

Guidelines for the Westmead PTA scale

Guidelines for the Westmead PTA scale Guidelines for the Westmead PTA scale N.E.V. Marosszeky, L. Ryan, E.A. Shores, J. Batchelor & J.E. Marosszeky Dept. of Rehabilitation Medicine, Westmead Hospital Dept. of Psychology, Macquarie University

More information

Meeting someone with disabilities etiquette

Meeting someone with disabilities etiquette Meeting someone with disabilities etiquette Many people unsure how to go about meeting someone with a disability because they don t want to say or do the wrong thing. Here are a few tips to keep in mind

More information

PELLISSIPPI STATE TECHNICAL COMMUNITY COLLEGE MASTER SYLLABUS BEGINNING AMERICAN SIGN LANGUAGE II ASL 1020

PELLISSIPPI STATE TECHNICAL COMMUNITY COLLEGE MASTER SYLLABUS BEGINNING AMERICAN SIGN LANGUAGE II ASL 1020 PELLISSIPPI STATE TECHNICAL COMMUNITY COLLEGE MASTER SYLLABUS BEGINNING AMERICAN SIGN LANGUAGE II ASL 1020 Class Hours: 3.0 Credit Hours: 3.0 Laboratory Hours: 0.0 Date Revised: Summer 01 Catalog Course

More information

Modeling the Use of Space for Pointing in American Sign Language Animation

Modeling the Use of Space for Pointing in American Sign Language Animation Modeling the Use of Space for Pointing in American Sign Language Animation Jigar Gohel, Sedeeq Al-khazraji, Matt Huenerfauth Rochester Institute of Technology, Golisano College of Computing and Information

More information

Answers to end of chapter questions

Answers to end of chapter questions Answers to end of chapter questions Chapter 1 What are the three most important characteristics of QCA as a method of data analysis? QCA is (1) systematic, (2) flexible, and (3) it reduces data. What are

More information

Strategies for Building ASL Literacy

Strategies for Building ASL Literacy Strategies for Building ASL Literacy Charlotte Enns CAEDHH-BC Annual Conference October 21, 2016 Outline Challenges to Understanding and Teaching ASL Grammar Overview of ASL Grammar and Narrative Structures

More information

CHINO VALLEY UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT INSTRUCTIONAL GUIDE AMERICAN SIGN LANGUAGE 1

CHINO VALLEY UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT INSTRUCTIONAL GUIDE AMERICAN SIGN LANGUAGE 1 CHINO VALLEY UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT INSTRUCTIONAL GUIDE AMERICAN SIGN LANGUAGE 1 Course Number 5716 Department Elective Length of Course One (1) year/two (2) semesters Grade Level 9-12 Prerequisite None

More information

Fleishman s Taxonomy of Human Abilities

Fleishman s Taxonomy of Human Abilities Fleishman s Taxonomy of Human Abilities Ability Taxonomy: Introduction At I/O Solutions, we utilize research to build selection tools that are effective and valid. Part of this effort is to use an ability

More information

Chapter 11. Experimental Design: One-Way Independent Samples Design

Chapter 11. Experimental Design: One-Way Independent Samples Design 11-1 Chapter 11. Experimental Design: One-Way Independent Samples Design Advantages and Limitations Comparing Two Groups Comparing t Test to ANOVA Independent Samples t Test Independent Samples ANOVA Comparing

More information

READY. Book. CURRICULUM ASSOCIATES, Inc. A Quick-Study Program TEST

READY. Book. CURRICULUM ASSOCIATES, Inc. A Quick-Study Program TEST A Quick-Study Program TEST Book 6 READY LONGER READING PASSAGES READY Reviews Key Concepts in Reading Comprehension Provides Practice Answering a Variety of Comprehension Questions Develops Test-Taking

More information

Animal Arithmetic. Non-humans Represent Numbers

Animal Arithmetic. Non-humans Represent Numbers Animal Arithmetic J. F. Cantlon, Rochester University, Rochester, NC, USA E. M. Brannon, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA ã 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Non-humans Represent Numbers Early reports

More information

Captioning Your Video Using YouTube Online Accessibility Series

Captioning Your Video Using YouTube Online Accessibility Series Captioning Your Video Using YouTube This document will show you how to use YouTube to add captions to a video, making it accessible to individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing. In order to post videos

More information

Characteristics of the Text Genre Nonfi ction Text Structure Three to eight lines of text in the same position on each page

Characteristics of the Text Genre Nonfi ction Text Structure Three to eight lines of text in the same position on each page LESSON 14 TEACHER S GUIDE by Karen J. Rothbardt Fountas-Pinnell Level J Nonfiction Selection Summary Children with special needs use a variety of special tools to help them see and hear. This simply written

More information

American Sign Language (ASL) and the Special Language Credit Option. Revised May 2017

American Sign Language (ASL) and the Special Language Credit Option. Revised May 2017 American Sign Language (ASL) and the Special Language Credit Option Revised May 2017 A m e r i c a n S i g n L a n g u a g e ( A S L ) a n d t h e S p e c i a l L a n g u a g e C r e d i t O p t i o n

More information

Accessibility. Serving Clients with Disabilities

Accessibility. Serving Clients with Disabilities Accessibility Serving Clients with Disabilities Did you know that just over 15.5% of Ontarians have a disability? That s 1 in every 7 Ontarians and as the population ages that number will grow. People

More information

Adjusting the way to speak when communicating with people who have visual impairment and additional needs

Adjusting the way to speak when communicating with people who have visual impairment and additional needs Adjusting the way to speak when communicating with people who have visual impairment and additional needs Ian Bell Specialist Independent Speech and Language Therapist Article 17 in the series Facilitating

More information

Mental Imagery. What is Imagery? What We Can Imagine 3/3/10. What is nature of the images? What is the nature of imagery for the other senses?

Mental Imagery. What is Imagery? What We Can Imagine 3/3/10. What is nature of the images? What is the nature of imagery for the other senses? Mental Imagery What is Imagery? What is nature of the images? Exact copy of original images? Represented in terms of meaning? If so, then how does the subjective sensation of an image arise? What is the

More information

Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function BRIEF. Interpretive Report. Developed by SAMPLE

Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function BRIEF. Interpretive Report. Developed by SAMPLE Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function BRIEF Interpretive Report Developed by Peter K. Isquith, PhD, Gerard A. Gioia, PhD, and PAR Staff Client Information Client Name : Sample Client Client ID

More information

Tips When Meeting A Person Who Has A Disability

Tips When Meeting A Person Who Has A Disability Tips When Meeting A Person Who Has A Disability Many people find meeting someone with a disability to be an awkward experience because they are afraid they will say or do the wrong thing; perhaps you are

More information

Allen Independent School District Bundled LOTE Curriculum Beginning 2017 School Year ASL III

Allen Independent School District Bundled LOTE Curriculum Beginning 2017 School Year ASL III Allen Independent School District Bundled LOTE Curriculum Beginning 2017 School Year ASL III Page 1 of 19 Revised: 8/1/2017 114.36. American Sign Language, Level III (One Credit), Adopted 2014. (a) General

More information

performs the entire story. The grade for the in-class performance is based mostly on fluency and evidence of adequate practice.

performs the entire story. The grade for the in-class performance is based mostly on fluency and evidence of adequate practice. September 3, 2013 1. College: Education 2. Department: Human Services 3. Course status: existing; does not require modification 4. Course prefix and number: SPH 272 5. Course title: Intermediate American

More information

CHAPTER FOUR: Identity and Communication in the Deaf Community

CHAPTER FOUR: Identity and Communication in the Deaf Community CHAPTER FOUR: Identity and Communication in the Deaf Community Chapter Summary Review this chapter in your textbook This chapter introduces a number of terms used to define identity and communication in

More information

World Language Department - Cambridge Public Schools STAGE 1 - DESIRED RESULTS. Unit Goals Unit 1: Introduction to American Sign Language

World Language Department - Cambridge Public Schools STAGE 1 - DESIRED RESULTS. Unit Goals Unit 1: Introduction to American Sign Language Language: American Sign Language (ASL) Unit 1: Introducing Oneself World Language Department - Cambridge Public Schools STAGE 1 - DESIRED RESULTS Unit Goals Unit 1: Introduction to American Sign Language

More information

A p p e n d i c e s. Appendix A: Using the Curriculum

A p p e n d i c e s. Appendix A: Using the Curriculum A p p e n d i c e s Appendix A: Using the Curriculum Using the Curriculum When using this Curriculum Framework, a number of factors need to be considered: the amount of time available for instruction the

More information

The Vine Assessment System by LifeCubby

The Vine Assessment System by LifeCubby The Vine Assessment System by LifeCubby A Fully Integrated Platform for Observation, Daily Reporting, Communications and Assessment For Early Childhood Professionals and the Families that they Serve Alignment

More information

Statisticians deal with groups of numbers. They often find it helpful to use

Statisticians deal with groups of numbers. They often find it helpful to use Chapter 4 Finding Your Center In This Chapter Working within your means Meeting conditions The median is the message Getting into the mode Statisticians deal with groups of numbers. They often find it

More information

Disability Services. Handbook for Deaf Students Using Interpreter Services/ Note-Taker Services. ...A Department in the Division of Student Affairs

Disability Services. Handbook for Deaf Students Using Interpreter Services/ Note-Taker Services. ...A Department in the Division of Student Affairs Disability Services...A Department in the Division of Student Affairs Handbook for Deaf Students Using Interpreter Services/ Note-Taker Services Available in Alternative Format Upon Request September 2006

More information

Thank you for your time and dedication to our industry and community.

Thank you for your time and dedication to our industry and community. secti To: AFP International Fundraising Conference Speakers From: Troy P. Coalman, Board Member, AFP Advancement Northwest, and Member, AFP International Committee for Diversity & Inclusion Date: February

More information

State Education Agency Accessibility and Accommodations Policies:

State Education Agency Accessibility and Accommodations Policies: State Education Agency Accessibility and Policies: 2017-2018 Within the ACCESS for ELLs 2.0 Accessibility and Supplement, there are a number of places where the text refers to the development of specific

More information

Interviewer: Tell us about the workshops you taught on Self-Determination.

Interviewer: Tell us about the workshops you taught on Self-Determination. INTERVIEW WITH JAMIE POPE This is an edited translation of an interview by Jelica Nuccio on August 26, 2011. Jelica began by explaining the project (a curriculum for SSPs, and for Deaf-Blind people regarding

More information

Encoding of Elements and Relations of Object Arrangements by Young Children

Encoding of Elements and Relations of Object Arrangements by Young Children Encoding of Elements and Relations of Object Arrangements by Young Children Leslee J. Martin (martin.1103@osu.edu) Department of Psychology & Center for Cognitive Science Ohio State University 216 Lazenby

More information

Appendix C: Protocol for the Use of the Scribe Accommodation and for Transcribing Student Responses

Appendix C: Protocol for the Use of the Scribe Accommodation and for Transcribing Student Responses Appendix C: Protocol for the Use of the Scribe Accommodation and for Transcribing Student Responses Scribing a student s responses by an adult test administrator is a response accommodation that allows

More information

I. Language and Communication Needs

I. Language and Communication Needs Child s Name Date Additional local program information The primary purpose of the Early Intervention Communication Plan is to promote discussion among all members of the Individualized Family Service Plan

More information

easy read Your rights under THE accessible InformatioN STandard

easy read Your rights under THE accessible InformatioN STandard easy read Your rights under THE accessible InformatioN STandard Your Rights Under The Accessible Information Standard 2 Introduction In June 2015 NHS introduced the Accessible Information Standard (AIS)

More information

New Mexico TEAM Professional Development Module: Deaf-blindness

New Mexico TEAM Professional Development Module: Deaf-blindness [Slide 1] Welcome Welcome to the New Mexico TEAM technical assistance module on making eligibility determinations under the category of deaf-blindness. This module will review the guidance of the NM TEAM

More information

easy read Your rights under THE accessible InformatioN STandard

easy read Your rights under THE accessible InformatioN STandard easy read Your rights under THE accessible InformatioN STandard Your Rights Under The Accessible Information Standard 2 1 Introduction In July 2015, NHS England published the Accessible Information Standard

More information

Mathematics in the New Zealand Curriculum Second Tier. Strand: Number and Algebra Thread: Patterns and Relationships Level: One

Mathematics in the New Zealand Curriculum Second Tier. Strand: Number and Algebra Thread: Patterns and Relationships Level: One Mathematics in the New Zealand Curriculum Second Tier Strand: Number and Algebra Thread: Patterns and Relationships Level: One Achievement Objectives: Generalise that the next counting number gives the

More information

CHAPTER ONE CORRELATION

CHAPTER ONE CORRELATION CHAPTER ONE CORRELATION 1.0 Introduction The first chapter focuses on the nature of statistical data of correlation. The aim of the series of exercises is to ensure the students are able to use SPSS to

More information

Sign Language Fun in the Early Childhood Classroom

Sign Language Fun in the Early Childhood Classroom Sign Language Fun in the Early Childhood Classroom Enrich Language and Literacy Skills of Young Hearing Children, Children with Special Needs, and English Language Learners by Sherrill B. Flora My name

More information

Interacting with people

Interacting with people Learning Guide Interacting with people 28518 Interact with people to provide support in a health or wellbeing setting Level 2 5 credits Name: Workplace: Issue 1.0 Copyright 2017 Careerforce All rights

More information

Good Communication Starts at Home

Good Communication Starts at Home Good Communication Starts at Home It is important to remember the primary and most valuable thing you can do for your deaf or hard of hearing baby at home is to communicate at every available opportunity,

More information

New Mexico TEAM Professional Development Module: Autism

New Mexico TEAM Professional Development Module: Autism [Slide 1]: Welcome Welcome to the New Mexico TEAM technical assistance module on making eligibility determinations under the category of autism. This module will review the guidance of the NM TEAM section

More information

Variability. After reading this chapter, you should be able to do the following:

Variability. After reading this chapter, you should be able to do the following: LEARIG OBJECTIVES C H A P T E R 3 Variability After reading this chapter, you should be able to do the following: Explain what the standard deviation measures Compute the variance and the standard deviation

More information

Code of Conduct for Communication Professionals

Code of Conduct for Communication Professionals Code of Conduct for Communication Professionals Effective from 1 January 2010 The purpose of this Code of Conduct is to ensure that NRCPD regulated communication professionals carry out their work with

More information

Observational Studies and Experiments. Observational Studies

Observational Studies and Experiments. Observational Studies Section 1 3: Observational Studies and Experiments Data is the basis for everything we do in statistics. Every method we use in this course starts with the collection of data. Observational Studies and

More information

In this chapter we discuss validity issues for quantitative research and for qualitative research.

In this chapter we discuss validity issues for quantitative research and for qualitative research. Chapter 8 Validity of Research Results (Reminder: Don t forget to utilize the concept maps and study questions as you study this and the other chapters.) In this chapter we discuss validity issues for

More information

NON-NEGOTIBLE EVALUATION CRITERIA

NON-NEGOTIBLE EVALUATION CRITERIA PUBLISHER: SUBJECT: COURSE: COPYRIGHT: SE ISBN: SPECIFIC GRADE: TITLE TE ISBN: NON-NEGOTIBLE EVALUATION CRITERIA 2017-2023 Group V World Language American Sign Language Level I Grades 7-12 Equity, Accessibility

More information

Learning to use a sign language

Learning to use a sign language 85 Chapter 8 Learning to use a sign language It is easy for a young child to learn a complete sign language. A child will first begin to understand the signs that others use, especially for people and

More information

Digital The College at Brockport: State University of New York. Bridget Ashmore

Digital The College at Brockport: State University of New York. Bridget Ashmore The College at Brockport: State University of New York Digital Commons @Brockport Education and Human Development Master's Theses Education and Human Development Summer 6-15-2017 A Study of the Performance

More information

An Introduction to the CBS Health Cognitive Assessment

An Introduction to the CBS Health Cognitive Assessment An Introduction to the CBS Health Cognitive Assessment CBS Health is an online brain health assessment service used by leading healthcare practitioners to quantify and objectively 1 of 9 assess, monitor,

More information

COLLEGE OF THE DESERT

COLLEGE OF THE DESERT COLLEGE OF THE DESERT Course Code ASL-001 Course Outline of Record 1. Course Code: ASL-001 2. a. Long Course Title: Elementary American Sign Language I b. Short Course Title: ELEMENTARY ASL I 3. a. Catalog

More information

Tips on How to Better Serve Customers with Various Disabilities

Tips on How to Better Serve Customers with Various Disabilities FREDERICTON AGE-FRIENDLY COMMUNITY ADVISORY COMMITTEE Tips on How to Better Serve Customers with Various Disabilities Fredericton - A Community for All Ages How To Welcome Customers With Disabilities People

More information

Chapter Three: Sampling Methods

Chapter Three: Sampling Methods Chapter Three: Sampling Methods The idea of this chapter is to make sure that you address sampling issues - even though you may be conducting an action research project and your sample is "defined" by

More information

Chapter 7: Descriptive Statistics

Chapter 7: Descriptive Statistics Chapter Overview Chapter 7 provides an introduction to basic strategies for describing groups statistically. Statistical concepts around normal distributions are discussed. The statistical procedures of

More information

Incorporation of Imaging-Based Functional Assessment Procedures into the DICOM Standard Draft version 0.1 7/27/2011

Incorporation of Imaging-Based Functional Assessment Procedures into the DICOM Standard Draft version 0.1 7/27/2011 Incorporation of Imaging-Based Functional Assessment Procedures into the DICOM Standard Draft version 0.1 7/27/2011 I. Purpose Drawing from the profile development of the QIBA-fMRI Technical Committee,

More information

Director of Testing and Disability Services Phone: (706) Fax: (706) E Mail:

Director of Testing and Disability Services Phone: (706) Fax: (706) E Mail: Angie S. Baker Testing and Disability Services Director of Testing and Disability Services Phone: (706)737 1469 Fax: (706)729 2298 E Mail: tds@gru.edu Deafness is an invisible disability. It is easy for

More information

BarOn Emotional Quotient Inventory. Resource Report. John Morris. Name: ID: Admin. Date: December 15, 2010 (Online) 17 Minutes 22 Seconds

BarOn Emotional Quotient Inventory. Resource Report. John Morris. Name: ID: Admin. Date: December 15, 2010 (Online) 17 Minutes 22 Seconds BarOn Emotional Quotient Inventory By Reuven Bar-On, Ph.D. Resource Report Name: ID: Admin. Date: Duration: John Morris December 15, 2010 (Online) 17 Minutes 22 Seconds Copyright 2002 Multi-Health Systems

More information

Section 6: Analysing Relationships Between Variables

Section 6: Analysing Relationships Between Variables 6. 1 Analysing Relationships Between Variables Section 6: Analysing Relationships Between Variables Choosing a Technique The Crosstabs Procedure The Chi Square Test The Means Procedure The Correlations

More information

Humans and nonhuman animals discriminate numbers in a

Humans and nonhuman animals discriminate numbers in a Semantic congruity affects numerical judgments similarly in monkeys and humans Jessica F. Cantlon* and Elizabeth M. Brannon* Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences and Center for Cognitive Neuroscience,

More information

Overview. Meeting Length 90 minutes. Senses [Meeting 1]

Overview. Meeting Length 90 minutes. Senses [Meeting 1] Overview Girls have fun exploring their five senses and how they use them in everyday life. They also learn about what life would be like without one of their senses. Note to Volunteers A few agenda activities

More information

Real Time Sign Language Processing System

Real Time Sign Language Processing System Real Time Sign Language Processing System Dibyabiva Seth (&), Anindita Ghosh, Ariruna Dasgupta, and Asoke Nath Department of Computer Science, St. Xavier s College (Autonomous), Kolkata, India meetdseth@gmail.com,

More information

UNDERSTANDING MEMORY

UNDERSTANDING MEMORY Communication Chain UNDERSTANDING MEMORY HEARING EXPRESSION thoughts/ ideas ATTENTION select words to use speech production FEEDBACK Hello, how are you? Communication Chain The Communication Chain picture

More information

MEASURES OF ASSOCIATION AND REGRESSION

MEASURES OF ASSOCIATION AND REGRESSION DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Posc/Uapp 816 MEASURES OF ASSOCIATION AND REGRESSION I. AGENDA: A. Measures of association B. Two variable regression C. Reading: 1. Start Agresti

More information

When Your Partner s Actions Seem Selfish, Inconsiderate, Immature, Inappropriate, or Bad in Some Other Way

When Your Partner s Actions Seem Selfish, Inconsiderate, Immature, Inappropriate, or Bad in Some Other Way When Your Partner s Actions Seem Selfish, Inconsiderate, Immature, Inappropriate, or Bad in Some Other Way Brent J. Atkinson, Ph.D. In the article, Habits of People Who Know How to Get their Partners to

More information

Mental operations on number symbols by-children*

Mental operations on number symbols by-children* Memory & Cognition 1974, Vol. 2,No. 3, 591-595 Mental operations on number symbols by-children* SUSAN HOFFMAN University offlorida, Gainesville, Florida 32601 TOM TRABASSO Princeton University, Princeton,

More information

1. INTRODUCTION. Vision based Multi-feature HGR Algorithms for HCI using ISL Page 1

1. INTRODUCTION. Vision based Multi-feature HGR Algorithms for HCI using ISL Page 1 1. INTRODUCTION Sign language interpretation is one of the HCI applications where hand gesture plays important role for communication. This chapter discusses sign language interpretation system with present

More information

Areas to Address with All Families

Areas to Address with All Families Areas to Address with All Families Whose Infants/Toddlers are Identified as Deaf or Hard of Hearing A Checklist and Guide for Family Resources Coordinators and Early Intervention Services Providers This

More information

Unconscious numerical priming despite interocular suppression

Unconscious numerical priming despite interocular suppression Supplementary Material Unconscious numerical priming despite interocular suppression 1, 2, * Bahador Bahrami Petra Vetter 1, 3 Eva Spolaore 1, 4 Silvia Pagano 1, 4 Brian Butterworth 1,3 Geraint Rees 1,

More information

Chapter 7. Mental Representation

Chapter 7. Mental Representation Chapter 7 Mental Representation Mental Representation Mental representation is a systematic correspondence between some element of a target domain and some element of a modeling (or representation) domain.

More information

The Regression-Discontinuity Design

The Regression-Discontinuity Design Page 1 of 10 Home» Design» Quasi-Experimental Design» The Regression-Discontinuity Design The regression-discontinuity design. What a terrible name! In everyday language both parts of the term have connotations

More information

Smith, C., Lentz, E. M., & Mikos, K. (2008). Signing Naturally: Student Workbook, Units 1-6. DawnSignPress. (ISBN: ).

Smith, C., Lentz, E. M., & Mikos, K. (2008). Signing Naturally: Student Workbook, Units 1-6. DawnSignPress. (ISBN: ). San José State University Connie L. Lurie College of Education, Special Education Department EDSE 14A-01 (21439) American Sign Language (ASL) I Spring 2018 Course and Contact Information Instructor: Everett

More information

Take Action! Caring for Your Diabetes

Take Action! Caring for Your Diabetes Educator Guide: Take Action! Caring for Your Diabetes Table of Contents Take Action! Caring for Your Diabetes Series Goals...2 Audience...2 Purpose of Guide...2 Icons Used in this Guide...3 Description

More information

Student Performance Q&A:

Student Performance Q&A: Student Performance Q&A: 2009 AP Statistics Free-Response Questions The following comments on the 2009 free-response questions for AP Statistics were written by the Chief Reader, Christine Franklin of

More information

An experimental investigation of consistency of explanation and graph representation

An experimental investigation of consistency of explanation and graph representation An experimental investigation of consistency of explanation and graph representation Nana Kanzaki (kanzaki@cog.human.nagoya-u.ac.jp) Graduate School of Information Science, Nagoya University, Japan Kazuhisa

More information

An Overview of Tactile American Sign Language Michelle Radin Special Education Service Agency

An Overview of Tactile American Sign Language Michelle Radin Special Education Service Agency An Overview of Tactile American Sign Language Michelle Radin Special Education Service Agency MRadin@sesa.org Tactile Sign Language 2 Introduction American Tactile Sign Language (TSL) is very similar to

More information

State of Connecticut Department of Education Division of Teaching and Learning Programs and Services Bureau of Special Education

State of Connecticut Department of Education Division of Teaching and Learning Programs and Services Bureau of Special Education State of Connecticut Department of Education Division of Teaching and Learning Programs and Services Bureau of Special Education Introduction Steps to Protect a Child s Right to Special Education: Procedural

More information

American Sign Language 1: High School Level

American Sign Language 1: High School Level American Sign Language 1: High School Level Grades: 7 th - 12 th Day (s) of Week: Wednesday Time of Class: 3:00 pm - 4:30pm ET Length of Class: 30 weeks Semester: Fall 2018, Winter 2019 and Spring 2019

More information

Accessible Computing Research for Users who are Deaf and Hard of Hearing (DHH)

Accessible Computing Research for Users who are Deaf and Hard of Hearing (DHH) Accessible Computing Research for Users who are Deaf and Hard of Hearing (DHH) Matt Huenerfauth Raja Kushalnagar Rochester Institute of Technology DHH Auditory Issues Links Accents/Intonation Listening

More information

A PARENT S GUIDE TO DEAF AND HARD OF HEARING EARLY INTERVENTION RECOMMENDATIONS

A PARENT S GUIDE TO DEAF AND HARD OF HEARING EARLY INTERVENTION RECOMMENDATIONS A PARENT S GUIDE TO DEAF AND HARD OF HEARING EARLY INTERVENTION RECOMMENDATIONS 2017 Developed by the Early Hearing Detection & Intervention Parent to Parent Committee A PARENT S GUIDE TO DEAF AND HARD

More information

DATA Model Skills Checklist: Curriculum Crosswalk

DATA Model Skills Checklist: Curriculum Crosswalk APPENDIX B DATA Model Skills Checklist: Curriculum Crosswalk This document is a crosswalk of the DATA Model Skills Checklist with the Assessment, Evaluation, Programming System (AEPS). The crosswalk with

More information

China Summer Institute 2015 Connie Steinman Connecting Chinese & American Cultures Through Sign Language & Religious Gestures

China Summer Institute 2015 Connie Steinman Connecting Chinese & American Cultures Through Sign Language & Religious Gestures 1 China Summer Institute 2015 Connie Steinman Connecting Chinese & American Cultures Through Sign Language & Religious Gestures Organizing Questions: How is sign language used to communicate in an area

More information

Perspective of Deafness-Exam 1

Perspective of Deafness-Exam 1 Perspective of Deafness-Exam 1 20/04/2015 3:46 PM Deaf People and Society Single Most striking feature/ Verbal communication barriors See better because you get better at eye sight because you can t rely

More information

Accessibility and Lecture Capture. David J. Blezard Michael S. McIntire Academic Technology

Accessibility and Lecture Capture. David J. Blezard Michael S. McIntire Academic Technology Accessibility and Lecture Capture David J. Blezard Michael S. McIntire Academic Technology IANAL WANL WANADACO What do they have in common? California Community Colleges California State University Fullerton

More information

Expert System Profile

Expert System Profile Expert System Profile GENERAL Domain: Medical Main General Function: Diagnosis System Name: INTERNIST-I/ CADUCEUS (or INTERNIST-II) Dates: 1970 s 1980 s Researchers: Ph.D. Harry Pople, M.D. Jack D. Myers

More information

Results & Statistics: Description and Correlation. I. Scales of Measurement A Review

Results & Statistics: Description and Correlation. I. Scales of Measurement A Review Results & Statistics: Description and Correlation The description and presentation of results involves a number of topics. These include scales of measurement, descriptive statistics used to summarize

More information

Analyzing a Food Nutrition Label for Sodium Intake. Content Analysis Report. Renee Adams Gail Arakaki Ryan Tanaka Michelle Yokota

Analyzing a Food Nutrition Label for Sodium Intake. Content Analysis Report. Renee Adams Gail Arakaki Ryan Tanaka Michelle Yokota Analyzing a Food Nutrition Label for Sodium Intake Content Analysis Report Renee Adams Gail Arakaki Ryan Tanaka Michelle Yokota adamsrk@hawaii.edu gailk@hawaii.edu rktanaka@hawaii.edu yokotam@hawaii.edu

More information