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Tactile signing is a communication method for individuals with deafblindness, utilizing touch-based sign language or manual communication systems. Various techniques, such as hand-over-hand signing and protactile, have been developed to facilitate communication, especially for those who have not learned a natural language. Over time, deafblind communities have formed, creating their own tactile languages that differ significantly from visual sign languages.

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Tactile signing is a communication method for individuals with deafblindness, utilizing touch-based sign language or manual communication systems. Various techniques, such as hand-over-hand signing and protactile, have been developed to facilitate communication, especially for those who have not learned a natural language. Over time, deafblind communities have formed, creating their own tactile languages that differ significantly from visual sign languages.

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Tactile signing

Tactile signing is a common means of communication used by people with deafblindness. It is based on a
sign language or another system of manual communication.

"Tactile signing" refers to the mode or medium, i.e. signing (using some form of signed language or code),
using touch. It does not indicate whether the signer is using a tactile form of a natural language (e.g.
American Sign Language), a modified form of such a visual sign language, a modified form of a manually
coded language, or something else.

Kinds

Until the 1970s, most people who were deaf and blind lived lives of isolation. As professionals became
aware of this population, attempts were made to serve deafblind people by creating manual alphabets or
modifying sign languages used by deaf-sighted people. See for example Helen Keller National Center,
LightHouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired and Alabama Institute for the Deaf and Blind. Several
methods of deafblind communication have been developed, including:

Hand-over-hand (also known as 'hands-on signing'): The receiver's hand(s) are placed lightly upon the
back of the hands of the signer to read the signs through touch and movement. The sign language used
in hand-over-hand signing is often a slightly modified version of the local sign language; this is especially
the case when used by people who have learned to read sign visually before losing their vision as with
Usher syndrome. The sign language used may also be a manually coded version of the local oral
language (such as Signed English), or a mid-way point between the two known as contact signing.

Tracking: The listener lightly places their hand(s) on the wrists or forearms of the signer to help them
track the signs visually (as the listener knows the location of their own hands and is thus able to focus on
the signer's hand(s) as they move in space. The listener using 'tracking' typically has a limited field of
vision).

Protactile: Sharing some qualities with hand-over-hand signing, protactile involves the use of signs on the
hands, wrist, elbow, arm, upper back, and when in a seated position, knees and the top of the thigh.
Invented by deafblind people, protactile communicates not just words but also information about
emotions and the environment.

Tactile fingerspelling: A manual form of the alphabet in which words are spelled out (see manual
alphabet) may be the best known as it was the method Anne Sullivan used to communicate with Helen
Keller. Different manual alphabets may be used, such as the one-handed ASL alphabet or the two-handed
manual alphabets used, for example, in Britain. Again, the listener places a hand over that of the signer.
This alphabet is also rarely used in the United States.

Lorm: A hand-touch alphabet developed in the 19th century by deafblind inventor and novelist
Hieronymus Lorm and used in several European countries.

Tracing or 'print-on-palm': Tracing letters (or shapes) onto the palm or body of receiver. Capital letters
produced in consistent ways are referred to as the 'block alphabet' or the 'spartan alphabet'.
Braille signing: Using six spots on the palm to represent the six dots of a braille cell. Alternatively, the
signer may 'type' onto a table as if using a braille typewriter (see Perkins Brailler) and the receiver will
place their hands on top. This method can have multiple receivers on top of each other, however a
receiver sitting opposite will be reading the braille cell backwards.

Additionally, simple ways of responding, such as a tap for 'yes' or a rubbing motion for 'no', may be included.
In Japan, a system developed by a deafblind woman is in use to represent the five vowels and five major
consonants of the Japanese language on the fingers, where the signer 'types' onto a table and the receiver
places their hands on top to 'listen' (see this page (http://www.deaflibrary.org/deaf_blind.html) for more
info).

What was especially challenging was communicating with children or babies born deaf and blind who had
not had an opportunity to learn a natural (spoken or signed) language. Below are listed some of these
attempts.

Co-active signing: The sender moves and manipulates the hands and arms of the Deafblind person to
form sign shapes, or fingerspelt words. This is often used with deafblind children to teach them signs,
and with people with an intellectual disability.

On-body signing: The body of the person who is deafblind is used to complete the sign formation with
another person. E.g.: chin, palm, chest. Often used with people who also have an intellectual disability.

Communities develop

As the decades progressed, deafblind people began to form communities where tactile language were
born. Just as deaf people brought together in communities first used invented forms of spoken language
and then created their own natural languages which suited the lives of deaf-sighted people (i.e. visual
languages), so too, deafblind people in communities first used modified forms of visual language and are
now creating their own natural tactile languages. For the development of visual sign languages, see for
example: Deaf Education; List of sign languages; Nicaraguan Sign Language. One of the most active
communities is in the Seattle area of Washington State. See Washington State DeafBlind Citizens [1] (http://
www.wsdbc.org) .

Comparison to visual sign language

Little data exists on the specifics of variation between visual and tactile sign language use. However,
studies suggest a significant degree of difference. In hand-over-hand signing, elements of deaf sign
languages known as 'non-manual features' (such as facial expression) will not be received, and will need to
be substituted with supplementary information produced manually. Common non-manual features used in
Deaf Sign languages that are absent in tactile signing include raised eyebrows as a question marker and a
shaking head as a negation.

Tactile signing also resides within a smaller space than is typical in visual sign language. Signs that touch
the body may be moved forward into a more neutral space. Other signs which are usually produced in an
'out of range' location (such as the leg) may be modified (either spelled or a variant sign used).
Different rules govern turn-taking, greetings and goodbyes.

An example of a language that naturally developed among the deaf-blind is Bay Islands Sign Language in
Honduras.

History

In 1648 in England, John Bulwer wrote of a couple who were proficient in tactile sign communication:

"A pregnant example of the officious nature of the Touch in supplying the defect or
temporall incapacity of the other senses we have in one Master Babington of Burntwood in
the County of Essex, an ingenious gentleman, who through some sicknesse becoming deaf,
doth notwithstanding feele words, and as if he had an eye in his finger, sees signes in the
darke; whose Wife discourseth very perfectly with him by a strange way of Arthrologie or
Alphabet contrived on the joynts of his Fingers; who taking him by the hand in the night,
can so discourse with him very exactly; for he feeling the joynts which she toucheth for
letters, by them collected into words, very readily conceives what shee would suggest unto
him. By which examples [referring to this case and to that of an abbot who became deaf,
dumb, and blind, who understood writing traced upon his naked arm] you may see how
ready upon any invitation of Art, the Tact is, to supply the defect, and to officiate for any or
all of the other senses, as being the most faithful sense to man, being both the Founder, and
Vicar generall to all the rest."

Deafblind Victorine Morriseau (1789–1832) successfully learned French as a child.[1][2]

Laura Bridgman (December 21, 1829 – May 24, 1889) was the first deaf-blind American child to gain a
significant education in the English language, twenty years before the more famous Helen Keller;
Bridgman's friend Anne Sullivan became Keller's aide. Bridgman was left deaf-blind at age two after
contracting scarlet fever. She was educated at the Perkins Institution for the Blind where, under the
direction of Samuel Gridley Howe, she learned to read and communicate using Braille and the manual
alphabet developed by Charles-Michel de l'Épée.[3]

See also

Braille

Moon type

Sign language

Bay Islands Sign Language

Tadoma
References

1. Cader-Nascimento, Fátima Ali Abdalah Abdel; da Costa, Maria da Piedade Resende (October 2003). "A
prática educacional com crianças surdocegas" (http://web.archive.org/web/20101110234944/www.s
bponline.org.br/revista2/vol11n2/art06_t.htm) [Educational practice with deafblind children]. Temas
Em Psicologia. 11 (2). ISSN 1413-389X (https://search.worldcat.org/issn/1413-389X) . Archived from
the original (http://www.sbponline.org.br/revista2/vol11n2/art06_t.htm) on 2010-11-10.

2. Collins, M. T. T. T. (1995). "History of Deaf-Blind Education". The Journal of Visual Impairment &
Blindness. 89 (3): 210–212. doi:10.1177/0145482X9508900304 (https://doi.org/10.1177%2F0145482
X9508900304) .

3. Mahoney, Rosemary (May 2014). "The Education of Laura Bridgman" (http://www.slate.com/articles/lif


e/history/2014/05/laura_bridgman_the_first_deaf_blind_person_to_be_successfully_educated_before.
html) . Slate. Retrieved May 29, 2016.

Frankel, M. A. (2002), Deaf-Blind Interpreting: Interpreters' Use of Negation in Tactile American Sign
Language, in Sign Language Studies 2.2, Gallaudet University Press.

Mesch, J. (2000), Tactile Swedish Sign Language: Turn Taking in Conversations of People Who Are Deaf and
Blind. In Bilingualism and Identity in Deaf Communities, ed. M. Metzger, 187–203. Washington, D.C.:
Gallaudet University Press.

O'Brien, S., and Steffen, C. (1996). Tactile ASL: ASL as Used by Deaf-Blind Persons. Gallaudet University
Communication Forum. Volume 5. Washington, D.C.: Gallaudet University Press.

Bulwer, J. (1648) Philocopus, or the Deaf and Dumbe Mans Friend, London: Humphrey and Moseley.

External links

A Deafblind Manual Alphabet (http://www.deafblind.com/card.html)

Sign Language with People who are Deaf-Blind (http://www.deafblind.com/slmorgan.html) :


Suggestions for Tactile and Visual Modifications.

Deafblind Manual alphabet (https://www.sense.org.uk/get-support/information-and-advice/communicati


on/deafblind-manual-alphabet/)

指尖手语 Zhijian Shouyu (http://www.chinadp.net.cn/datasearch_/aboutUs/2012-06/09-10089.html)


(China)

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