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over the course of the week we've been
talking about articulators for spoken
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language
for example your tongue your lips how
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they move when you produce
sounds whether the airflow is unimpeded
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or it has
turbulence as it comes out we're going
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to do the same with sign languages
we're going to describe sign languages
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in terms of their articulators
for example your hands your fingers
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parts of your face we're going to have
those articulators and we're also going
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to describe
their actions for example the direction
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for your palm whether you're moving
down or down leftwards or downwards and
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so forth
so we're basically going to do the same
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thing we did we're going to observe the
motions of articulators
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and use a system of symbols to describe
those motions of articulators
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the first thing i want to tell you is
that there's no single system
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in spoken languages we have ipa and
that's pretty much what everyone uses
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but for sign languages there's no agreed
upon system there's several of them
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for example stokoe is has a broader
transcription it doesn't have as much
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detail
the HamNoSys system which is the one
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that i'll show you here
has narrower transcription these two by
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the way
are the first few lines of goldilocks
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and if you want to see the whole story
transcribed in HamNoSys from asl from
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american sign language you can
click on that link on the pdf of this
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video
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let me show you an example of HamNoSys
the girl there
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is making a sign from dgs (Deutsche Gebärdensprache)
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the german sign language and the sign
means
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house so we have a video of the girl
doing the sign
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we have a schematic
of how the sign is made and we also have
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here like a virtual avatar
of how the sign is produced as you can
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see
several stages uh hands like this
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hands going down and then flipping and
going downwards
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as you can see two of the diagrams have
the fingers
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pointing ahead and she also has a
variant in the video where she has her
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hands
in a position like this and then going
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down
so these are ways of saying house in
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german and by the way very important
thing you might notice that
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what she's doing with her lips is that
she's saying the german word
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house for a house that is not a part of
the sign she is
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mouthing the word unfortunately i
couldn't find a version
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like a video version of the word that
didn't have the german word
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superimposed upon it but as you can see
the
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the sign for house has a
neutral lip position so
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saying house as you produce it is not
part of the dgs word it's just
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because it was i found it in a
dictionary
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so this is the transcription of that
word
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let's go one symbol at a time
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HamNoSys breaks down a
sign into several components the shape
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of your hand for example you can see
that she has her fingers
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extended not as a fist
HamNoSys describes the direction and
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orientation
of your hands it describes the
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relationship
between the two hands one interesting
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thing is that you only have one
tongue but you do have two hands so you
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have to coordinate the movements between
the two
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it describes the motions of your hands
here the hands are clearly going
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sideways and down it describes the
location
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so the sign is in a neutral location
around the neck and chest it's not for
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example
to the right of your head and HamNoSys
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describes the non-manual features
so for example if the sign has you
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puffing your cheeks or doing something
with your mouth or your eyebrows
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let's go through this transcription one
symbol at a time
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the this one here describes the hand
shape
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and this symbol is for all fingers flat
so position like this as you can see
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these are just a few examples of
literally dozens probably hundreds of
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symbols
um this one means index extended
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this symbol here means fist hand so this
one tells you that the hand
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should have all fingers flat and
extended as you can see there
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these symbols here tell you the
direction and orientation
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so this one means what she's doing there
is this one which is upwards like
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pointing forth if you're looking from
above this is the one she's doing
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um if it was just the arrow without this
little line
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it would be what the other versions of
the side were doing which is just the
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fingers pointing
forward so that's the direction and this
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one is the orientation
of your palm as you can see here this
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would be totally down position
and this would be slight rotation so
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that is
what both hands are doing
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this little tilt here tells you that
they are flipping
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as they move and as you can see they are
going to change
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these symbols tell you the relationship
between the hands
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this one tells you that the sign is
symmetric vertically as you can see
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what this hand is doing the other hand
is doing as well
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it is vertically symmetrical i apologize
and the two hands are touching each
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other
as they start so they start to gather
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there we go and then they separate
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we have the motion of the hands which go
uh apologies from
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this motion of 135 degrees and then turn
downwards to 180.
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the transcription is has no explicit
features for the location because it's
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set
in the general location
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it could have an additional
descriptor if
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it was made above the head for example
or on your forehead or around your teeth
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it also has descriptions for different
parts of your torso
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and as you can see you can specify a lot
of narrow
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transcription of whether it's left of
your forehead
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or right to your forehead and so forth
this restriction also doesn't have
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explicit
transcription for non-manual features
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because she's not doing
making any of them she's not moving her
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eyebrows she's moving
again her mouth to say the german word
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but that's not part of the sign
but the system does include uh details
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for how your limbs
are moving for what your mouth is doing
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and what your face
would be doing for example whether your
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cheeks are puffed or whether you puff
them
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gradually whether you suck them in
without sucking any
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air and so forth so
this transcription as you can see tells
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you
the shape of your of your hand the
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direction
and orientation of your palm what you're
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not so if you're right-handed your
dominant hand is going to be your right
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if you're left-handed it's going to be
your left
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the symmetry refers to your dominant
hand
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executing the symbol and your
non-dominant hand following
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so if you're right-handed this is going
to mean that
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whatever your right or dominant hand is
doing
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your left hand is following and flipped
if you're left-handed and these tell you
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the motions
this is another example so this is the
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word
germany in dgs the first part of the
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transcription
is as you can see index and thumb
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extended going upwards and i have the
palm wrong
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so these are extended the sign goes
upwards
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and the palm has to be completely
towards the left
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so i start like this
the second part of the transcription
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tells you that you need to touch your
forehead
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with your index
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again what he's doing with his lips is
saying deutschland
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but that's not part of the actual sign
so that's an example of how you can
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transcribe phonetically
a sign from a sign language there's no
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standard way to do it there's several
systems i showed you just one of them
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however HamNoSys is very
very good for narrow transcriptions as
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you can see it gives you a lot of
details
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and it decomposes each sign into its
hand shape
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the directional orientation of your
hands the relationship between the two
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hands
the motions of the hands the location
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on which the sign is produced and any
non-manual features that may accompany
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it
so as you can see you describe it in
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pretty much the same way
as a spoken language