Marie Coppola
Professor/Psychological Sciences
Storrs Mansfield
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Scholarly Contributions
182 Scholarly Contributions
The roots of Sign Language identity: Life and language evolution perspectives
2016
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
The impact of language experience on the development of number representations in deaf, hard of hearing, and hearing children
2016
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Early and accessible language input: Creating an optimal foundation for deaf and hard of hearing children’s linguistic and cognitive development
2016
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Breaking new ground: Methods for linguistic and cognitive fieldwork with signers of emerging languages
2016
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Unexpected routes to language: Evidence from child and adult homesign systems
2016
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
The effects of gesture frequency on discourse production in anomic aphasia: A preliminary investigation
2016
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Strong and weak agents in gesture and emerging sign language
2016
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Effects of gesture restriction on quality of narrative production
2017
Research Type: Journal Article
Successful communication does not drive language development: Evidence from adult homesign
2017
Research Type: Journal Article
Visible social interactions do not support the development of false belief understanding in the absence of linguistic input: Evidence from deaf adult homesigners
2017
Research Type: Journal Article
Handshape complexity as a precursor to phonology: Variation, emergence, and acquisition
2017
Research Type: Journal Article
The Effects of Gesture Frequency On Discourse Production In Anomic Aphasia: A Preliminary Investigation
2017
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
How quickly does phonology emerge in a “village” vs.“community” sign language?
2019
Research Type: Conference Proceedings
Grammaticalization of the Body and Space in Nicaraguan Sign Language
2019
Research Type: Conference Proceedings
The emergence of the formal category “symmetry” in a new sign language
2019
Research Type: Journal Article