@inproceedings{bono:18027:sign-lang:lrec,
  author    = {Bono, Mayumi and Sakaida, Rui and Makino, Ryosaku and Okada, Tomohiro and Kikuchi, Kouhei and Cibulka, Mio and Willoughby, Louisa and Iwasaki, Shimako and Fukushima, Satoshi},
  title     = {Tactile {Japanese} {Sign} {Language} and Finger {Braille}: An Example of Data Collection for Minority Languages in {Japan}},
  pages     = {7--14},
  editor    = {Bono, Mayumi and Efthimiou, Eleni and Fotinea, Stavroula-Evita and Hanke, Thomas and Hochgesang, Julie A. and Kristoffersen, Jette and Mesch, Johanna and Osugi, Yutaka},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of the {LREC2018} 8th Workshop on the Representation and Processing of Sign Languages: Involving the Language Community},
  maintitle = {11th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation ({LREC} 2018)},
  publisher = {{European Language Resources Association (ELRA)}},
  address   = {Miyazaki, Japan},
  day       = {12},
  month     = may,
  year      = {2018},
  isbn      = {979-10-95546-01-6},
  language  = {english},
  url       = {https://www.sign-lang.uni-hamburg.de/lrec/pub/18027.html},
  abstract  = {We recorded data on deafblind people in Japan. In this filming project, we found that Japanese deafblind people use different communication methods, tactile Japanese sign language and finger braille, depending on their hearing ability and eyesight. Tactile sign language is normally used by those who were born deaf or lost their hearing at an early age and then lost their sight after acquiring a sign language. These people are known as deaf-based deafblind (D-deafblind). Finger braille is popular in Japan, but largely unknown elsewhere. It is normally used by those who were born blind or lost their sight at an early age and subsequently lost their hearing after learning how to produce speech using their throat and mouth. These people are known as blind-based deafblind (B-deafblind hereafter). This paper introduces our filming project; the ways of data collection, translation and annotation. In addition, we show our preliminary observations using our data sets to clarify the important fact that we should collect their interactions at this moment. The data show how their interactions have already become established and sophisticated in their communities. We discuss how our filming project will contribute to the deafblind community in Japan.}
}

@inproceedings{cibulka:18032:sign-lang:lrec,
  author    = {Cibulka, Mio},
  title     = {Communication Across Sensorial Divides -- A Proposed Community Sourced Corpus of Everyday Interaction between Deaf Signers and Hearing Nonsigners},
  pages     = {23--28},
  editor    = {Bono, Mayumi and Efthimiou, Eleni and Fotinea, Stavroula-Evita and Hanke, Thomas and Hochgesang, Julie A. and Kristoffersen, Jette and Mesch, Johanna and Osugi, Yutaka},
  booktitle = {Proceedings of the {LREC2018} 8th Workshop on the Representation and Processing of Sign Languages: Involving the Language Community},
  maintitle = {11th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation ({LREC} 2018)},
  publisher = {{European Language Resources Association (ELRA)}},
  address   = {Miyazaki, Japan},
  day       = {12},
  month     = may,
  year      = {2018},
  isbn      = {979-10-95546-01-6},
  language  = {english},
  url       = {https://www.sign-lang.uni-hamburg.de/lrec/pub/18032.html},
  abstract  = {While research on conversation in signed and spoken languages has been flourishing, research on their intersection is scarce. This paper presents an ongoing project that gathers and analyses video data from deaf people's everyday interaction with hearing nonsigners and considers possibilities of involving the communication community that is at its centre and participant empowerment. The scope is to investigate the organisation and structure of communication in which linguistic resources are less accessible and in which social meaning tends to emerge from the interactants' online analysis of the local context (e.g., spatial environment, bodily configurations and movement of the interactants).}
}

