Keehner Miadeleine, Gathercole Susan E
School of Psychology, University of Dundee, Dundee, Scotland.
Mem Cognit. 2007 Jun;35(4):752-61. doi: 10.3758/bf03193312.
Three experiments examined spatial transformation abilities in hearing people who acquired sign language in early adulthood. The performance of the nonnative hearing signers was compared with that of hearing people with no knowledge of sign language. The two groups were matched for age and gender. Using an adapted Corsi blocks paradigm, the experimental task simulated spatial relations in sign discourse but offered no opportunity for linguistic coding. Experiment 1 showed that the hearing signers performed significantly better than the nonsigners on a task that entailed 180 degree rotation, which is the canonical spatial relationship in sign language discourse. Experiment 2 found that the signers did not show the typical costs associated with processing rotated stimuli, and Experiment 3 ruled out the possibility that their advantage relied on seen hand movements. We conclude that sign language experience, even when acquired in adulthood by hearing people, can give rise to adaptations in cognitive processes associated with the manipulation of visuospatial information.
三项实验研究了成年早期习得手语的听力正常者的空间转换能力。将非母语听力手语者的表现与不懂手语的听力正常者进行比较。两组在年龄和性别上相匹配。使用改编后的科西方块范式,实验任务模拟了手语语篇中的空间关系,但没有提供语言编码的机会。实验1表明,在一项需要180度旋转的任务中,听力手语者的表现明显优于非手语者,180度旋转是手语语篇中的典型空间关系。实验2发现,手语者没有表现出与处理旋转刺激相关的典型代价,实验3排除了他们的优势依赖于可见手部动作的可能性。我们得出结论,即使是听力正常者在成年后获得的手语经验,也会引起与视觉空间信息操作相关的认知过程的适应性变化。