22.3057, Calls: Comp Ling, Syntax, Semantics, Phonetics, Phonology/Germany

linguist at LINGUISTLIST.ORG linguist at LINGUISTLIST.ORG
Sat Jul 30 13:03:40 UTC 2011


LINGUIST List: Vol-22-3057. Sat Jul 30 2011. ISSN: 1068 - 4875.

Subject: 22.3057, Calls: Comp Ling, Syntax, Semantics, Phonetics, Phonology/Germany

Moderators: Anthony Aristar, Eastern Michigan U <aristar at linguistlist.org>
            Helen Aristar-Dry, Eastern Michigan U <hdry at linguistlist.org>
 
Reviews: Veronika Drake, U of Wisconsin-Madison  
Monica Macaulay, U of Wisconsin-Madison  
Rajiv Rao, U of Wisconsin-Madison  
Joseph Salmons, U of Wisconsin-Madison  
Anja Wanner, U of Wisconsin-Madison  
       <reviews at linguistlist.org> 

Homepage: http://linguistlist.org/

The LINGUIST List is funded by Eastern Michigan University, 
and donations from subscribers and publishers.

Editor for this issue: Alison Zaharee <alison at linguistlist.org>
================================================================  

LINGUIST is pleased to announce the launch of an exciting new feature:  
Easy Abstracts! Easy Abs is a free abstract submission and review facility 
designed to help conference organizers and reviewers accept and process 
abstracts online.  Just go to: http://www.linguistlist.org/confcustom, 
and begin your conference customization process today! With Easy Abstracts, 
submission and review will be as easy as 1-2-3!

===========================Directory==============================  

1)
Date: 30-Jul-2011
From: Mira Grubic [is-workshop at uni-potsdam.de]
Subject: Information Structure: Empirical Perspectives on Theory
 

	
-------------------------Message 1 ---------------------------------- 
Date: Sat, 30 Jul 2011 09:01:17
From: Mira Grubic [is-workshop at uni-potsdam.de]
Subject: Information Structure: Empirical Perspectives on Theory

E-mail this message to a friend:
http://linguistlist.org/issues/emailmessage/verification.cfm?iss=22-3057.html&submissionid=4528101&topicid=3&msgnumber=1
  

Full Title: Information Structure: Empirical Perspectives on Theory 

Date: 02-Dec-2011 - 03-Dec-2011
Location: Potsdam, Germany 
Contact Person: Mira Grubic
Meeting Email: is-workshop at uni-potsdam.de
Web Site: http://www.sfb632.uni-potsdam.de/~is-workshop/ 

Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics; Phonetics; Phonology; Semantics; Syntax 

Call Deadline: 23-Sep-2011 

Meeting Description:

The Collaborative Research Centre 632 'Information Structure' at the University of Potsdam, Humboldt Universität zu Berlin, and Freie Universität Berlin will host a graduate/postgraduate student conference on information structure on the 2nd and 3rd of December 2011.

The conference aims to bring together Ph.D. students or advanced MA students (or equivalent) working on the empirical investigation of information structure and information structural categories.

Interesting questions include, but are not limited to:

- What information structural categories are necessary for describing, analysing, and modeling how information is structured or packaged in utterances: givenness/newness, focus, topic, contrast, frame setting (cf. Chafe 1976, Krifka 2008)?
- How does one deal with optionality and redundancy in the grammatical marking of information structure?
- How can information structure account for grammatical variation, e.g. word order variation in the left sentence periphery (a syntactic domain assumed to be important for the marking of IS categories, cf. e.g. Rizzi 1997)?
- Are information structural categories gradable/continuous, e.g. can contrastive elements be more and less contrastive (e.g. Greif 2010), given elements more and less given (Hempelmann et al.'s (2005) newness scale), topics sole or conjoint (Cook & Bildhauer 2011)?
- Cross-linguistically, which of the proposed categories have a measurable grammatical realisation? Are any of these categories universal?
- How can different methods of psycholinguistics (e.g., experiments, field studies, etc.) tease apart which information structural categories facilitate language processing and how? How can difficulty in language processing be explained in terms of IS categories?
- Which information structural categories (or sub-categories) can be reliably assigned using classification or clustering techniques? What knowledge is needed as input? Do categorizations differ with respect to difficulty? Regarding parallel corpora, how parallel are they with respect to information structural properties? Can information structural categories be projected from one language to another?

Invited Speakers: 

Manfred Krifka, Humboldt Universität (Awaiting confirmation)
Others: to be announced 

Call for Papers:

Submissions may include but are not limited to studies from the fields of syntax, semantics, phonetics/phonology and their interfaces to information structure. We are interested in results obtained from a variety of different data types and methods, e.g. corpora, experimental data, or data from field work. Our goal is to reach a better understanding of information structural categories and their grammatical representation and surface realisation.

We invite anonymous 1 page abstracts (references, examples and figures can be on a second page) for 30 minute presentations. Submissions should be in the following format: pdf format, A4 size, single spacing, the font must not be smaller than 12pt, at least 2,5cm margins on all sides. The name of the pdf file should be the title of the abstract: title.pdf

The body of the email should contain the following information:

1. Name(s) of author(s)
2. Title of talk
3. Affiliation(s)
4. E-mail address(es)

Important Dates:

Deadline for abstract submissions: 23. September 2011
Notification of acceptance: 10. October 2011
Workshop: 02./03. December 2011







-----------------------------------------------------------
LINGUIST List: Vol-22-3057	
----------------------------------------------------------


	



More information about the LINGUIST mailing list