Laboratory for Language and Cognitive Development
Children Signing Prof. Jennie Pyers’ research focuses on the relationship between language and cognition. In particular, she examines both language-general and language-specific effects on human cognition. To investigate which domains of cognition are impaired when language acquisition is delayed, she works with language-delayed deaf children and Deaf adults who have learned an emerging sign language, Nicaraguan Sign Language. She also investigates how experience with a sign language affects spatial cognition and categorization. Her recent research interests also include language processing in hearing bimodal bilinguals—Children of Deaf Adults who are fluent in both a signed and a spoken language—and the relationship between gesture and spatial cognition.

Language-General Effects on Cognition:
False-belief understanding, visual perspective taking, & spatial cognition in learners of Nicaraguan Sign Language

Language-Specific Effects on Cognition:
Mental rotation & spatial categorization in fluent users of American Sign Language

Bimodal-Bilingualism:
Language production and comprehension in bilinguals fluent in a signed and spoken language
Cognitive effects of bimodal bilingualism

Created by: Rachel Kaston '10 | Maintained by: Jennie Pyers | Date Created: June 24, 2008 | Last Modified: July 18, 2008 | Expires: September 1, 2009