TISLR

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==Events==
==Events==
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[http://www.tislr12.org/program/ TISLR12]:
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4-7 January 2016, Melbourne Convention Centre, Melbourne, Australia
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Presentasions:
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*Admasu, Kidane: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%2088.pdf Lexical Variation in Ethiopian Sign Language.]
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*Ang, Mary: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%2083.pdf Negation in Singapore Sign Language.]
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*Bauer, Anastasia,  Elizabeth Marrkilyi Ellis, Alice Gaby and Jennifer Green: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%2028.pdf Pointing to the body: kin signs in Australian Indigenous sign languages.]
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*Belsitzman, Gal, Wendy Sandlerand Irit Meir: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Session%2010%20-%20Presentation%202.pdf Foreign Accent In Sign Language: Evidence From Al-Sayyid Bedouin Sign Language.]
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*Benedicto, Elena, Chiara Branchini, Lara Mantovan and Robin Shay: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%20106.pdf Decomposing the internal structure of motion predicates in three sign languages: LIS, HKSL, ASL.]
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*Byun, Kang-Suk, Connie deVos, Stephen C. Levinson and Ulrike Zeshan: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%20102.pdf Repair strategies and recursion as evidence of individual differences in metalinguistic skill in Cross-signing.]
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*Dillon, Angela: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%20122.pdf Naming and framing: The influences of early Auslan linguistic research on community discourse.]
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*Fan, Ryan: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%2090.pdf Mouthing and Initialization in Egyptian Sign Language.]
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*Hosemann, Jana, Svetlana Dachkovsky, Annika Herrmann, Markus Steinbach & Wendy Sandler: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Session%2010%20-%20Presentation%204.pdf Signers’ Perception Of Conditional Intonation: A Comparative Study Of Israeli Sign Language And German Sign Language.]
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*Johnston, Trevor: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Session%201%20-%20Presentation%201.pdf The Syntactic Distribution Of Pronoun-Like Signs In Auslan.]
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*Kaneko, Michiko and Josephine Matla: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%2058.pdf Neologism in SASL (South African Sign Language): the process of creating new signs for linguistic terminology.]
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*Kaneko, Michiko: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Session%209%20-%20Presentation%204.pdf Onomatopoeic Mouth Gestures In Creative Sign Language.]
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*Kikuchi, Kouhei and Mayumi Bono: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%20101.pdf Searching for phenomena in a spontaneous Japanese signed discourse corpus using structured annotations.]
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*Kratochvíl, Frantisek,  Mary Ang, Shu Yi, Jessica Mak, May Low Jarn and Li-Sa Wang: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%2076.pdf Language contact-induced layering of the basic vocabulary in Singapore Sign Language.]
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*Kuroda, Eikoh,  Chika Hara and Akio Suemori: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%2038.pdf Sentence-final particle, mouthing kore, in Japanese Sign Language.]
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*Li, Jia and Gladys Tang: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%2068.pdf Relative clauses in Hong Kong Sign Language.]
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*Li, Jieqiong  and Gladys Tang: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%202.pdf Acquisition of Personal Pronouns by an HKSL-Cantonese Bilingual Deaf Child: A Case Study.]
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*Lin, Hao: [A preliminary investigation of polar question in CSL.]
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*Liu, Hongyu: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%2055.pdf FINISH for Perfective and Reduplication for Non-perfective: Then what else is in Shanghai Variety of Chinese Sign Language (SCSL)?]
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*Ma, Yunyi: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%2050.pdf History of Signing in China.]
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*Manns, Howard, Shimako Iwasaki, Louisa Willoughby and Meredith Bartlett: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Session%204%20-%20Presentation%202.pdf The Polite And The Politic Of Unfolding Tactile Auslan Conversation.]
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*McKee, Rachel and David McKee: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Session%204%20-%20Presentation%204.pdf Assessing The Vitality Of New Zealand Sign Language.]
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*Morgan, Hope: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Session%209%20-%20Presentation%203.pdf Language From Gesture: A Case Study From East Africa.]
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*Nyst, Victoria: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Session%2013%20-%20Presentation%202.pdf Cross-linguistic variation in size and shape iconicity: comparing sign languages and their gestural environments .]
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*Ortega, Gerardo, Beyza Sümer and Aslı Özyürek: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%2043.pdf Type of iconicity matters: bias for action-based signs in sign language acquisition.]
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*Palfreyman, Nick: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Session%2014%20-%20Presentation%204.pdf Sign Language Sociolinguistics And The ‘Third Wave’: The Social Significance Of Javanese Mouthings In An Indonesian City.]
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*Power, Justin: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%2071.pdf Handshapes in Afghan Sign Language: Evidence of contrast in a young sign language.]
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*Power, Justin: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Session%2013%20-%20Presentation%201.pdf Initialization In Afghan Sign Language: Iconicity And Arbitrariness In Complex Interaction.]
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*Sagara, Keiko  and Nick Palfreyman: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Session%204%20-%20Presentation%203.pdf The Difference: Variation In The Numerals Of Japanese, Taiwan And South Korean Sign Language.]
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*Sagara, Keiko and Nick Palfreyman: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Session%204%20-%20Presentation%203.pdf The Difference: Variation In The Numerals Of Japanese, Taiwan And South Korean Sign Language.]
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*Sasaki, Daisuke: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%2015.pdf The Lexical Influence of Japanese Sign Language on Taiwan and Korean Sign Languages: Data from Taiwanese and Korean Deaf Signers.]
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*Siu, Rebecca: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%20119.pdf Sociolinguistic Variation in Hong Kong Sign Language (HKSL): the Lexical and Phonological Levels.]
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*Stamp, Rose and Wendy Sandler: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Session%2014%20-%20Presentation%202.pdf Articulating The Emergence Of Language.]
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*Sumer, Beyza, Inge Zwitserlood and Asli Özyürek: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%20116.pdf Hands in motion: Learning to express motion events in a sign and a spoken language (TİD).]
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*Sze, Felix, Aaron Wong, Monica Wei, Chi SanAo, HoMan Un, KaWengU and KamSun Wong: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%2077.pdf Preliminary documentation of Macau Sign Language.]
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*Tamene, Eyasu: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%2010.pdf How many sign languages are there in Ethiopia? Lexical comparative study of Ethiopian Sign Language.]
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*Tang, Gladys  and Li Jia: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Poster%2049.pdf Classifier Verbs and Word Order Variation in Deaf Children’s Acquisition of Classifier Constructions in Hong Kong Sign Language.]
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*Tasçı, Süleyman Sabri and Aslı Göksel: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Session%2012%20-%20Presentation%202.pdf The Structural Correlates Of Grammatical Dichotomies: Native Compounds In TiD .]
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*Vale, Mireille: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Session%2014%20-%20Presentation%203.pdf Characteristics Of Folk Definitions In NZSL: Implications For Sign Language Lexicography.]
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*Yano, Uiko  and Kazumi Matsuoka: [http://www.tislr12.org/wp-content/uploads/posters/Session%2012%20-%20Presentation%204.pdf Number, Time Line, And Spatial Expressions In A Village Sign Language In Japan: A Preliminary Study Of Ehime-Oshima Island Sign Language.]
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[http://www.ucl.ac.uk/dcal/tislr/ TISLR11]:
[http://www.ucl.ac.uk/dcal/tislr/ TISLR11]:

Revision as of 21:08, 20 March 2016

The conference series Theoretical Issues in Sign Language Research is targeted specifically at the linguistic study of signed languages. Its organisation is supported by SLLS to take place every three years.


Contents

Formal name

Theoretical Issues in Sign Language Research


History

The first was held in June 1986 in Rochester, New York, followed by Washington, D.C. in 1988, Boston in 1990 and San Diego, California in 1992...


Events

TISLR12: 4-7 January 2016, Melbourne Convention Centre, Melbourne, Australia

Presentasions:


TISLR11:

10th to 13th July 2013, London UCL(University College London)

Presentasions:




TISLR 10:

Sep. 30 - Oct. 2, 2010, Purdue University, located close to Chicago and Indianapolis airports.

Presentations:


TISLR 9:

December 6th to 9th, 2006, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil.

Presentations:


TISLR 8:

30-Sep-2004 - 02-Oct-2004, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain

Presentations:


TISLR 7 (TISLR 2000):

July 23-27, 2000 University of Amsterdam, Netherlands.

Presentations:

  • Hurlbut, Hope M.: A Preliminary Survey of the Signed Languages of Malaysia
  • Johnston,Trevor: BSL, Auslan and NZSL: Three Signed Languages or One?
  • Nyst, Victoria and Anne Baker: The Phonology of Name Signs: a Comparison between the Sign Languages of Uganda, Mali, Adamorobe and The Netherlands
  • Sze, Yim Binh Felix: Word Order of Hong Kong Sign Language


TISLR 6:

Gallaudet hosts Sixth International Conference on Theoretical Issues in Sign Language Research.

Presentations:

  • Aarons, Debra: The linguistic structure of South African Sign Language after apartheid
  • Schmaling, Constanze: ASL in northern Nigeria: Will Hausa Sign Language survive?
  • Meir, Irit: The analysis of two verb classes in Israeli Sign Language
  • Sasaki,Daisuke: Movement classification and aspectual modulation
  • Ann, Jean: Dialectal variation in Taiwan Sign Language: Evidence from morphology, syntax and the lexicon
  • Nyst, Victoria: Handshapes in Ugandan Sign Language
  • Toms, Jenny and Berna Hutchins: The use of role shift and topicalization in relation to discourse forms in Auslan
  • Monaghan, Leila: Creating standardized communication in the New Zealand Deaf community
  • Morgan, Michael: Tracking topic in Japanese Sign Language discourse: Index and icon
  • Zeshan, Ulrike: Functions of the index in IPSL
  • Schembri, Adam, Robert Adam, Gillian Wigglesworth, Trevor Johnston, Roz Barker and Greg Leigh: The test battery for Auslan morphology and syntax
  • Ogilvy, Dale: Linguistic and cognitive functions in the learning disabled deaf
  • Tzeng, Shih-jay: Language mode, language production rate, working memory span, and reading comprehension of Chinese deaf readers


TISLR 5:

UQAM(University of Quebec at Montreal) from the 19th to the 22nd of September 1996.

Presentations:

  • Johnston, Trevor and Adam Schembri: Defining and profiling lexis in a sign language p; Auslan
  • Ann, Jean: Two types of morphemic handshapes in Taiwan Sign Language
  • Supalla, Ted and Yutaka Osugi: Structural analysis of gender handshapes in Japanese Sign Language (Nihon Syuwa)
  • Ann, Jean: Handshape assimilations in Taiwan Sign Language
  • Mori, Soya: JSL phonology from comparative study between JSL and ASL


TISLR 4:

in San Diego, California, 1992.


TISLR 3:

in Boston, 1990.


TISLR II:

sponsored by the Department of Linguistics and Interpreting at Gallaudet University. The conference took place May 18-21, 1988, at Gallaudet University's Northwest Campus, and wasthe second in a series begun in Rochester, New York, in 1986.


The first Theoretical Issues in Sign Language Research;

University of Rochester, Rochester, NY; June 1986.

Status of sign language

Previous TISLR meetings have been held in the United States or Canada where automatically ASL has been one of the conference languages alongside spoken English. Deaf participants from other countries have had to provide their own interpreter from ASL or English into their own sign language. Since TISLR 2000 was held in the Netherlands, the conference languages were Sign Language of the Netherlands (NGT) and English, so that again Deaf participants from elsewhere had to provide their own interpreters. This situation led to much discussion as to which languages should be the conference languages in the future and as to whether more interpreter services can be centrally provided. Deaf participants felt that this issue must be fully debated and wrote a manifesto for the sign linguistic community (Rathman, Mathur & Boudreault 2000). (GU Press)


Links

Cross-linguistic perspectives in sign language research Selected papers from TISLR 2000

Notes

International Societies and Congresses of sign language
ICSLDEA | LREC | SIGN | SLLS | TISLR | WASLI | WFD | WOCAL
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