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. 2017 Aug 2;8:1280. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01280

Table 1.

Summary of studies investigating the role of iconicity in sign L1 and L2 acquisition.

Study Number participants Methodology Effect of iconicity
L1 acquisition
Orlansky and Bonvillian, 1984 13 Parental reports on children’s productive/receptive vocabulary Null
Meier et al., 2008 4 Assesment of children’s exaggeration of iconic features of signs Null
Ortega et al. (2014, 2017) 48 (20 children, 28 adults) Production of action or perceptual sign in a spatial description Preference for action signs
Anderson and Reilly, 2002 69 (34 for longitudinal data) MacArthur Bates CDI (ASL) Iconicity was not manipulated
Woolfe et al., 2010 29 MacArthur Bates CDI (BSL) Iconicity was not manipulated
Rinaldi et al., 2014 8 Picture naming task (sign) Iconicity was not manipulated
Thompson et al., 2013 31 MacArthur Bates CDI (BSL) Positive
L2 acquisition
Lieberth and Gamble, 1991 50 Sign recall (in English) Positive
Campbell et al., 1992 53 Forced-choice and naming task Positive
Baus et al., 2012 30 (15 non-signers, 15 proficient signers) English-ASL translation Positive
Morett, 2015 26 Sign learning (production of signs) Positive
Ortega and Morgan, 2015a 30 Sign repetition (imitation of signs) Negative
Ortega and Morgan, 2015a 9 (longitudinal) Sign repetition (imitation of signs) Negative