Spatial topology in Singapore English: explorations in gesture forms and language universality

Present-day investigations into spatial language have developed to a point of abstraction. Investigations capitalise on the breadth of research preceding them by opting to innovate at the post-hoc level; existing methods are thus truncated to derive presumed data primed for further research. As a...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ng, Yuan Jie
Other Authors: Rachel S. Y. Chen
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/177615
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-177615
record_format dspace
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1776152024-06-01T17:07:06Z Spatial topology in Singapore English: explorations in gesture forms and language universality Ng, Yuan Jie Rachel S. Y. Chen School of Humanities rachelchen@ntu.edu.sg Social Sciences Spatial encodement Topological space Language variety TRPS Gesture form analysis Present-day investigations into spatial language have developed to a point of abstraction. Investigations capitalise on the breadth of research preceding them by opting to innovate at the post-hoc level; existing methods are thus truncated to derive presumed data primed for further research. As a result, the landscape of spatial language data is predominantly lexical themed. This study represents a pilot effort to broadly innovate spatial language investigation at the experimental level. A novel framework for analysing gesture as spatial language is inserted into an established research paradigm, and the results recorded to observe for potential patterns. Thirty participants were tasked to, in Singapore English, spatially encode eight scenes maximally representing topological space. Encodement forms at both verbal expression and physical gesture were recorded. Results showed that lexical spatial encodement patterns displays marginal differences at the varietal level, that gesture display their own range of encodement patterns delineated by participant idiosyncrasy, and that terms and gesture, while linked, featured minimal levels of encodement foci. This paper posits an initial study of spatial language at the intersection of lexicality and gesture–that while gesture and spatial language are salient markers of space, further research must be taken to unearth their correspondence. Bachelor's degree 2024-05-29T04:52:08Z 2024-05-29T04:52:08Z 2024 Final Year Project (FYP) Ng, Y. J. (2024). Spatial topology in Singapore English: explorations in gesture forms and language universality. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/177615 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/177615 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social Sciences
Spatial encodement
Topological space
Language variety
TRPS
Gesture form analysis
spellingShingle Social Sciences
Spatial encodement
Topological space
Language variety
TRPS
Gesture form analysis
Ng, Yuan Jie
Spatial topology in Singapore English: explorations in gesture forms and language universality
description Present-day investigations into spatial language have developed to a point of abstraction. Investigations capitalise on the breadth of research preceding them by opting to innovate at the post-hoc level; existing methods are thus truncated to derive presumed data primed for further research. As a result, the landscape of spatial language data is predominantly lexical themed. This study represents a pilot effort to broadly innovate spatial language investigation at the experimental level. A novel framework for analysing gesture as spatial language is inserted into an established research paradigm, and the results recorded to observe for potential patterns. Thirty participants were tasked to, in Singapore English, spatially encode eight scenes maximally representing topological space. Encodement forms at both verbal expression and physical gesture were recorded. Results showed that lexical spatial encodement patterns displays marginal differences at the varietal level, that gesture display their own range of encodement patterns delineated by participant idiosyncrasy, and that terms and gesture, while linked, featured minimal levels of encodement foci. This paper posits an initial study of spatial language at the intersection of lexicality and gesture–that while gesture and spatial language are salient markers of space, further research must be taken to unearth their correspondence.
author2 Rachel S. Y. Chen
author_facet Rachel S. Y. Chen
Ng, Yuan Jie
format Final Year Project
author Ng, Yuan Jie
author_sort Ng, Yuan Jie
title Spatial topology in Singapore English: explorations in gesture forms and language universality
title_short Spatial topology in Singapore English: explorations in gesture forms and language universality
title_full Spatial topology in Singapore English: explorations in gesture forms and language universality
title_fullStr Spatial topology in Singapore English: explorations in gesture forms and language universality
title_full_unstemmed Spatial topology in Singapore English: explorations in gesture forms and language universality
title_sort spatial topology in singapore english: explorations in gesture forms and language universality
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/177615
_version_ 1800916313530433536