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Krause, Jean C.; Hague, Andrew K. – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 2020
This paper, the fourth in a series concerned with the level of access afforded to students who use educational interpreters, focuses on the intelligibility of interpreters who use Signing Exact English (SEE). Eight expert receivers of SEE were employed to evaluate the intelligibility of transliterated messages that varied in accuracy and lag time.…
Descriptors: English, Accuracy, Sign Language, Deaf Interpreting
Darroch, Kathy; Marshall, Liza – Northeast Technical Assistance Center (NETAC), Rochester Institute of Technology, 1998
An interpreter's role is to facilitate communication and convey all auditory and signed information so that both hearing and deaf individuals may fully interact. The common types of services provided by interpreters are: (1) American Sign Language (ASL) Interpretation--a visual-gestural language with its own linguistic features; (2) Sign Language…
Descriptors: Cued Speech, Deafness, English, American Sign Language
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Cokely, Dennis – Sign Language Studies, 1986
In a study of sign language interpretive skills, data provided evidence of a definite relationship between lag time and miscue occurrence. As the degree of temporal synchrony between the sign language message and the target language interpretation increased, so did the frequency of miscues. (CB)
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Comprehension, Correlation, Cued Speech
Cappiello, Samuel, Comp.; Quenin, Catherine, Comp. – PEPNet-Northeast, 2003
Cued Speech (CS) is a tool used to make spoken languages visible. While it uses the hands to communicate information visually, it is not a form of sign language. Signed languages are languages in their own right and use the hands, body, and face to present complete concepts rather than words. They have their own grammar systems and vocabularies.…
Descriptors: Cued Speech, Sign Language, Literacy, Communication Strategies