An etymological study of Singapore sign language : the influence of American sign language on Singapore sign language

Though there is no officially recognized national sign language in Singapore, Singapore Sign Language (SgSL) is recognized by the local deaf community. It has influences from Shanghainese Sign Language (SSL) and American Sign Language (ASL), and is continually developing with locally generated si...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lee, Naomi Elizabeth
Other Authors: Francis Bond
Format: Final Year Project (FYP)
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66055
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author Lee, Naomi Elizabeth
author2 Francis Bond
author_facet Francis Bond
Lee, Naomi Elizabeth
author_sort Lee, Naomi Elizabeth
collection NTU
description Though there is no officially recognized national sign language in Singapore, Singapore Sign Language (SgSL) is recognized by the local deaf community. It has influences from Shanghainese Sign Language (SSL) and American Sign Language (ASL), and is continually developing with locally generated signs. This study aims to give an insight into the influence of ASL on SgSL, which serves as a first look into the etymology of SgSL. 14 participants were recruited in this study; 3 participants were given a Swadesh list for sign languages consisting of 100 words, which they were asked to sign in SgSL. The videos of ASL signs for the same words were obtained online and presented alongside the SgSL signs to the other 11 participants, who gave judgments about the similarities of each pair of signs. The signs were also transcribed using the Hamburg Sign Language Notation System, or HamNoSys, and further analyzed based on handedness and four traditional phonological parameters – handshape, location, movement and orientation. This was done by calculating the Levenshtein distances between each pair of transcriptions. The similarity of the signs was then determined after consideration of the participants’ judgments and the analysis of phonological parameters, and it was found that the signs were similar to a great extent, which suggests that SgSL is heavily influenced by ASL
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spelling ntu-10356/660552021-12-20T01:11:14Z An etymological study of Singapore sign language : the influence of American sign language on Singapore sign language Lee, Naomi Elizabeth Francis Bond School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Humanities Though there is no officially recognized national sign language in Singapore, Singapore Sign Language (SgSL) is recognized by the local deaf community. It has influences from Shanghainese Sign Language (SSL) and American Sign Language (ASL), and is continually developing with locally generated signs. This study aims to give an insight into the influence of ASL on SgSL, which serves as a first look into the etymology of SgSL. 14 participants were recruited in this study; 3 participants were given a Swadesh list for sign languages consisting of 100 words, which they were asked to sign in SgSL. The videos of ASL signs for the same words were obtained online and presented alongside the SgSL signs to the other 11 participants, who gave judgments about the similarities of each pair of signs. The signs were also transcribed using the Hamburg Sign Language Notation System, or HamNoSys, and further analyzed based on handedness and four traditional phonological parameters – handshape, location, movement and orientation. This was done by calculating the Levenshtein distances between each pair of transcriptions. The similarity of the signs was then determined after consideration of the participants’ judgments and the analysis of phonological parameters, and it was found that the signs were similar to a great extent, which suggests that SgSL is heavily influenced by ASL Bachelor of Arts 2016-03-08T02:58:14Z 2016-03-08T02:58:14Z 2016 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66055 en Nanyang Technological University 71 p. application/pdf
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities
Lee, Naomi Elizabeth
An etymological study of Singapore sign language : the influence of American sign language on Singapore sign language
title An etymological study of Singapore sign language : the influence of American sign language on Singapore sign language
title_full An etymological study of Singapore sign language : the influence of American sign language on Singapore sign language
title_fullStr An etymological study of Singapore sign language : the influence of American sign language on Singapore sign language
title_full_unstemmed An etymological study of Singapore sign language : the influence of American sign language on Singapore sign language
title_short An etymological study of Singapore sign language : the influence of American sign language on Singapore sign language
title_sort etymological study of singapore sign language the influence of american sign language on singapore sign language
topic DRNTU::Humanities
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/66055
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