Marie Coppola
Professor/Psychological Sciences
Storrs Mansfield
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Scholarly Contributions
182 Scholarly Contributions
Sign Language Typology Book Series. Vol. 3: Formational units in sign languages
2011
Research Type: Book
When does a system become phonological? Handshape production in gesturers, signers, and homesigners
2011
Research Type: Journal Article
Getting to the point: How a simple gesture became a linguistic element in Nicaraguan signing
2011
Research Type: Other Scholarly Work
Communication partners’ comprehension of family-based homesign gesture systems in Nicaragua
2011
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
The origin of numbers as summary symbols: Evidence from homesign and Nicaraguan Sign Language
2011
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Acquiring handshape distinctions in nouns and classifier predicates in American Sign Language
2011
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Handshape complexity in sign languages: Its relevance for historical development, typology, and acquisition
2011
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Factors affecting family members’ comprehension of family-based homesign gesture systems in Nicaragua
2011
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
What counts as counting? Is one-to-one correspondence enough?
2011
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Sign Language Typology Book Series. Vol. 4: Sign Languages in village communities: Anthropological and linguistic insights
2012
Research Type: Book
Mothers do not drive structure in adult homesign systems: Evidence from comprehension
2012
Research Type: Conference Proceedings
WHO chased the bird? Narrative development in an emerging language
2012
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Emergence of lexicons in family-based homesign systems in Nicaragua
2012
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Deafness and language access in Nicaragua: Theoretical and practical perspectives
2012
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Number without a language model: What homesigners tell us about number representations
2012
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Homesigners reveal core knowledge: Number language is robust but numerical cognition is not
2012
Research Type: Poster/Presentation