Rose Stamp
University of Haifa
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Publication
Featured researches published by Rose Stamp.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Rose Stamp; Adam Schembri; Jordan Fenlon; R Rentelis; Bencie Woll; Kearsy Cormier
This paper presents results from a corpus-based study investigating lexical variation in BSL. An earlier study investigating variation in BSL numeral signs found that younger signers were using a decreasing variety of regionally distinct variants, suggesting that levelling may be taking place. Here, we report findings from a larger investigation looking at regional lexical variants for colours, countries, numbers and UK placenames elicited as part of the BSL Corpus Project. Age, school location and language background were significant predictors of lexical variation, with younger signers using a more levelled variety. This change appears to be happening faster in particular sub-groups of the deaf community (e.g., signers from hearing families). Also, we find that for the names of some UK cities, signers from outside the region use a different sign than those who live in the region.
Sign Language Studies | 2015
Rose Stamp; Adam Schembri; Jordan Fenlon; R Rentelis
This article presents findings from the first major study to investigate lexical variation and change in British Sign Language (BSL) number signs. As part of the BSL Corpus Project, number sign variants were elicited from 249 deaf signers from eight sites throughout the UK. Age, school location, and language background were found to be significant predictors for the use of regional number sign variants. The results suggest that leveling may be taking place in BSL number signs inasmuch as younger signers are using a decreasing variety of regionally distinct number sign variants. These results need to be understood in light of the sociolinguistic characteristics of the British deaf community, which differ from those of spoken language communities, with which linguists are more familiar.
Archive | 2018
Adam Schembri; Rose Stamp; Jordan Fenlon; Kearsy Cormier
British Sign Language (BSL) is the language used by the deaf community in the UK. In this chapter, we describe sociolinguistic variation and change in BSL varieties in England. We show how factors that drive sociolinguistic variation and change in both spoken and signed language communities are broadly similar. Social factors include, for example, a signer’s age group, region of origin, gender, ethnicity and socio-economic status. Linguistic factors include assimilation and co-articulation effects. Some other factors, such as age of acquisition, however, appear unique to signing communities.
Frontiers in Psychology | 2018
Svetlana Dachkovsky; Rose Stamp; Wendy Sandler
A universally acknowledged, core property of language is its complexity, at each level of structure – sounds, words, phrases, clauses, utterances, and higher levels of discourse. How does this complexity originate and develop in a language? We cannot fully answer this question from spoken languages, since they are all thousands of years old or descended from old languages. However, sign languages of deaf communities can arise at any time and provide empirical data for testing hypotheses related to the emergence of language complexity. An added advantage of the signed modality is a correspondence between visible physical articulations and linguistic structures, providing a more transparent view of linguistic complexity and its emergence (Sandler, 2012). These essential characteristics of sign languages allow us to address the issue of emerging complexity by documenting the use of the body for linguistic purposes. We look at three types of discourse relations of increasing complexity motivated by research on spoken languages – additive, symmetric, and asymmetric (Mann and Thompson, 1988; Sanders et al., 1992). Each relation type can connect units at two different levels: within propositions (simpler) and across propositions (more complex).1 We hypothesized that these relations provide a measure for charting the time course of emergence of complexity, from simplest to most complex, in a new sign language. We test this hypothesis on Israeli Sign Language (ISL), a young language, some of whose earliest users are still available for recording. Taking advantage of the unique relation in sign languages between bodily articulations and linguistic form, we study fifteen ISL signers from three generations, and demonstrate that the predictions indeed hold. We also find that younger signers tend to converge on more systematic marking of relations, that they use fewer articulators for a given linguistic function than older signers, and that the form of articulations becomes reduced, as the language matures. Mapping discourse relations to the bodily expression of linguistic components across age groups reveals how simpler, less constrained, and more gesture-like expressions, become language.
Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education | 2016
Rose Stamp; Adam Schembri; Bronwen G. Evans; Kearsy Cormier
Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education | 2016
Rose Stamp
In: Braber, N and Jansen, S, (eds.) Sociolinguistics in England. Palgrave Macmillan: Houndsmills, Basingstoke, United Kingdom. (2018) | 2018
Adam Schembri; Jordan Fenlon; Rose Stamp; Kearsy Cormier
Presented at: Sociolinguistics Symposium 19. (2012) | 2012
Rose Stamp; Kearsy Cormier; Bronwen G. Evans; Adam Schembri
UNSPECIFIED, Tokyo, Japan. (2011) | 2011
Adam Schembri; Jordan Fenlon; R Rentelis; Rose Stamp; Kearsy Cormier
Presented at: Australian Sign Language Interpreters' Association National Conference. (2011) | 2011
Adam Schembri; Kearsy Cormier; Jordan Fenlon; D Goswell; Trevor Johnston; R Rentelis; Rose Stamp