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  1. Gesture, sign, and language: The coming of age of sign language and gesture studies.Susan Goldin-Meadow & Diane Brentari - 2017 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 40:e46.
    How does sign language compare with gesture, on the one hand, and spoken language on the other? Sign was once viewed as nothing more than a system of pictorial gestures without linguistic structure. More recently, researchers have argued that sign is no different from spoken language, with all of the same linguistic structures. The pendulum is currently swinging back toward the view that sign is gestural, or at least has gestural components. The goal of this review is to elucidate the (...)
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  • Understanding environmental sounds in sentence context.Sophia Uddin, Shannon L. M. Heald, Stephen C. Van Hedger, Serena Klos & Howard C. Nusbaum - 2018 - Cognition 172 (C):134-143.
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  • Communicative Context Affects Use of Referential Prosody.Christina Y. Tzeng, Laura L. Namy & Lynne C. Nygaard - 2019 - Cognitive Science 43 (11):e12799.
    The current study assessed the extent to which the use of referential prosody varies with communicative demand. Speaker–listener dyads completed a referential communication task during which speakers attempted to indicate one of two color swatches (one bright, one dark) to listeners. Speakers' bright sentences were reliably higher pitched than dark sentences for ambiguous (e.g., bright red versus dark red) but not unambiguous (e.g., bright red versus dark purple) trials, suggesting that speakers produced meaningful acoustic cues to brightness when the accompanying (...)
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  • Moving to the Speed of Sound: Context Modulation of the Effect of Acoustic Properties of Speech.Hadas Shintel & Howard C. Nusbaum - 2008 - Cognitive Science 32 (6):1063-1074.
    Suprasegmental acoustic patterns in speech can convey meaningful information and affect listeners' interpretation in various ways, including through systematic analog mapping of message‐relevant information onto prosody. We examined whether the effect of analog acoustic variation is governed by the acoustic properties themselves. For example, fast speech may always prime the concept of speed or a faster response. Alternatively, the effect may be modulated by the context‐dependent interpretation of those properties; the effect of rate may depend on how listeners construe its (...)
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  • Creating a communication system from scratch: gesture beats vocalization hands down.Nicolas Fay, Casey J. Lister, T. Mark Ellison & Susan Goldin-Meadow - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  • What makes words special? Words as unmotivated cues.Pierce Edmiston & Gary Lupyan - 2015 - Cognition 143 (C):93-100.
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