By Jason Lamberton

I subscribe to the New Scientist magazine, which often antagonizes me because it occasionally carries pieces that are, according to me, siren songs singing sourdicide (sourds = deaf + genocide). Or, in less antagonistic words, the magazine from time to time heralds the work being done towards a cure for deafness, often carrying articles that carry a certain British tone of disdain towards sign language.

For example: a 25 September 2004 letter to the editor said:

Although profoundly sympathetic to the wish of deaf people not to see themselves as disabled, I believe they are deluded. I need only one word to refute the “different but equal” claim: music.

Should a cure be perfected, to withhold it from a profoundly deaf infant would be an abominable act.
[emphasis mine]

Deluded! An abominable act! Whoa! It seems like the English folks over there in the offices of New Scientist think that music is central to life. A recent (12 June 2007) Technology Special Report on their website touting “New implant may ‘bring music to the deaf’” helps drive home that assertion. Another article titled Ear implant success sparks culture war (23 November 2006) opens up with the sentence: “COULD the end of sign language for deaf children be in sight?” Yet another letter calls us genocide-invoking whingers (16 December 2006).

But, lately, they have fallen silent on the issue of deafness till a couple items came up in recent issues. So, for my first piece as a guest blogger for DeafDC.com, I wanted to bring up two recent items to attention. We should keep these pieces in mind as evidence of the need for ASL (or BSL, et al.) to continue its existence, that it is not a threat to cochlear implants, and that it can actually contribute to the full utilization of a CI, and ultimately, a bona fide cure for deafness.

I know that this issue is not new, but I just wanted to rehash it and sorta celebrate the fact that scientists out there are actually starting to realize and acknowledge the empowering power sign language has on a developing infant brain. A letter to the editor by Anthea Fraser Gupta, a sociolinguist at the University of Leeds with research interests in child language in a social context, in the May 26, 2007 issue, entitled Grammar Lesson said:

There are many languages based on gesture, notably various sign languages, and these have grammar just as complex as that of speech-based languages. Speech is not essential for language. [emphasis mine]

The first thing that came to my mind was “yay! Another bit of evidence that the oral/CI method should not quarantine itself from the healthy benefits of sign language, evidence that should be used to show hearing parents of deaf babies what to do.”

In the next issue, there was a short column called Babies are watching your language:

…showed that deaf babies use visual cues to learn sign language, but ‘never did we dream that young hearing babies acquiring spoken languages also use visual cues in this stunning way.’

Interesting. The article claims that, up to eight months of age, hearing babies, because their auditory processes in the brain are not yet developed, rely on lip-reading. That ability disappears after eight months unless the baby’s raised bilingually. The twin brain processes enables the baby to “switch” from reading lips to hearing speech.

This drives home the point that babies with CIs are better off learning sign language as soon as possible. It improves the baby’s chances for perfect speech (the sole goal of nearly all hearing parents of deaf babies), which is the crux of their desire to open up a hole in their babies’ skulls in order to implant their cochleae. Ostracizing sign language from the baby’s early development destroys the potential to build a strong foundational framework for learning speech. No wonder there are so many oral/CI failures!

Jason Lamberton is a student pilot, progressing towards his life-long goal to become an astronaut. He will enroll in Gallaudet’s Masters program in Linguistics this fall, and was a Ph.D. student at George Washington University doing research on a 3-D ASL animation and gloved computer recognition of sign language (the AcceleGlove) — research projects which Jason plans to continue working on at Gallaudet. He has more interests than he can handle, and considers himself an autodidact — a self-taught person.


© Copyrighted material. This article cannot be copied, reproduced or redistributed without the express written consent of the author. As with every blog on this website, this blog does not reflect the opinion of DeafDC.com.