Unlocking the Secrets of Simultaneity: From Sign Language to Silent Gesture

Published on May 26, 2022

Imagine you’re planning a surprise party for your best friend. You need to communicate all the important details—date, time, location, theme—to your co-conspirators quickly and accurately. How would you do it? Well, you might use your hands to point at a calendar, your fingers to indicate the hour, and your facial expressions to convey excitement. By using multiple articulators and iconic gestures in this way, you would be communicating simultaneously and efficiently, just like sign language users! Recent research compared the use of simultaneous and iconic constructions in an established sign language (Italian Sign Language) to silent gesture. The results showed that while simultaneity was present in silent gesture, it was less frequent and qualitatively different from sign language. This suggests that the use of simultaneous and iconic constructions is an emergent property specific to sign languages, enhancing communicative efficiency. This study highlights the importance of understanding how different human languages adapt and utilize modality-specific resources for effective communication and expression.

Abstract
Sign languages use multiple articulators and iconicity in the visual modality which allow linguistic units to be organized not only linearly but also simultaneously. Recent research has shown that users of an established sign language such as LIS (Italian Sign Language) use simultaneous and iconic constructions as a modality-specific resource to achieve communicative efficiency when they are required to encode informationally rich events. However, it remains to be explored whether the use of such simultaneous and iconic constructions recruited for communicative efficiency can be employed even without a linguistic system (i.e., in silent gesture) or whether they are specific to linguistic patterning (i.e., in LIS). In the present study, we conducted the same experiment as in Slonimska et al. with 23 Italian speakers using silent gesture and compared the results of the two studies. The findings showed that while simultaneity was afforded by the visual modality to some extent, its use in silent gesture was nevertheless less frequent and qualitatively different than when used within a linguistic system. Thus, the use of simultaneous and iconic constructions for communicative efficiency constitutes an emergent property of sign languages. The present study highlights the importance of studying modality-specific resources and their use for linguistic expression in order to promote a more thorough understanding of the language faculty and its modality-specific adaptive capabilities.

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