24.3688, Calls: Semantics, Pragmatics, Syntax, Morphology, Typology, Psycholing/Italy

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LINGUIST List: Vol-24-3688. Thu Sep 19 2013. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 24.3688, Calls: Semantics, Pragmatics, Syntax, Morphology, Typology, Psycholing/Italy

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Date: Thu, 19 Sep 2013 10:53:30
From: Fabienne Martin [fabienne.martin at ling.uni-stuttgart.de]
Subject: Agent Control Over Non-Culminating Events

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Full Title: Agent Control Over Non-Culminating Events 

Date: 16-Jun-2014 - 18-Jun-2014
Location: Pisa, Italy 
Contact Person: Fabienne Martin
Meeting Email: fabienne.martin at ling.uni-stuttgart.de
Web Site: http://linguistica.sns.it/Chronos11/conference_workshop.htm 

Linguistic Field(s): Morphology; Pragmatics; Psycholinguistics; Semantics; Syntax; Typology 

Call Deadline: 31-Oct-2013 

Meeting Description:

In many languages from typologically unrelated families such as Mandarin (Koenig & Chief 2008), Thai (Koenig & Muansuwan 2000), Korean (Park 1993, van Valin 2005), Skwxwúmesh, St'at'imcets, or Saanich Straits Salish (Bar-el 2005, Bar-el et al. 2005, Kiyota 2008, Jacobs 2011), Tagalog (Dell 1983), Japanese (Ikegami 1985), Hindi (Singh 1998, Altshuler 2013), Tamil (Pederson 2008), Russian, Karachay-Balkar, Mari and Bagwalal  (Tatevosov & Ivanov 2009), Adyghe (Arkadiev & Letuchiy 2009), sentences with perfective accomplishments can be used to describe partial, incomplete or unsuccessful events. On this construal, perfective accomplishments do not give rise to culmination entailments. It is thus possible to deny the culmination of the event whose occurrence is asserted without generating a contradiction (e.g. to assert Mary killed him but he didn't die.). A similar phenomenon has been observed for our more familiar Romance and Germanic languages, albeit for a very restricted set of verbs only, such as double object verbs (Oehrle 1976, Gropen et al. 1989, Beavers 2010, cf. 'Mary explained the problem to Peter, and nevertheless he didn't understand it').

This workshop explores a correlation, gone to a large extent unnoticed in the literature, between the availability of non-culminating construals for accomplishments and the control of the agent over the described event. The generalization put forth, which we call the Agent Control Hypothesis (ACH, Demirdache & Martin 2013), is that nonculminating readings of accomplishment predicates require the predicate's external argument to be associated with 'agenthood' properties.

Evidence for the ACH is provided by Salish languages, as discussed by Bar-el et al. 2005, Kiyota 2008, or Jacobs 2011: while so called 'control' perfective transitives do not give rise to culmination entailments, non-control/causatives (Saanich, St'at'imcets) or limited control (Skwxwúmesh) entail culmination.

Moreover, for around fifty French and German verbs, Martin & Schäfer 2012 & 2013 observe that when we replace the agent subject in (1) with a (pure) causer as in (2), the non-culminating reading disappears:

(1)  Marie lui expliqua le problème, et pourtant il ne le comprit pas. (agent subject)
'Marie explained the problem to him, and nevertheless he didn't understand it.'

(2)  Ce résultat lui expliqua le problème de l'analyse, # pourtant il ne le comprit pas. (causer subject)
'This result made him understand the problem of the analysis, nevertheless he didn't understand it.'

The ACH is also supported by the observation that in many languages from unrelated families, completive markers can also be used to indicate that the action is performed non-intentionally/inadvertently (Fauconnier 2012, 2013).  Another piece of evidence is provided by the correlation argued for in Germanic languages between the licensing of causer subjects and the 'resultativity' of the verbal predicate (Folli & Harley 2005, Travis 2005, Schäfer 2012): while causers are generally fine with bi-eventive verbs, they are claimed to be acceptable as subjects of mono-eventive verbs only if these are augmented with a resultative phrase.

The outstanding question, however, is defining the relevant notion of (agent) control (see Jacobs for critical discussion of this issue inSkwxwúmesh). What properties of being an agent are relevant for canceling culmination entailments? Should we discriminate, for instance, agent-like instruments from causer-like instruments and, furthermore, among causers, between natural forces, events/states, or non-acting humans?

Invited Speakers:

Leora Bar-El (University of Montana, TBC)
Jean-Pierre Koenig (Buffalo University)

Call for Papers:

The workshop welcomes papers putting to test, on empirical, theoretical or experimental grounds, the Agent Control Hypothesis, as well as papers on related issues raised by non-culminating accomplishments:
 
- To what extent does the ACH hold cross-linguistically and, if so, what are the properties of agenthood relevant for canceling culmination inferences?
- How do the analyses that have been proposed for non-culminating construals (e.g. modal, aspectual, scalar accounts) fare in accounting for the ACH?
- Does the ACH hold for the various subtypes of non-culminating readings distinguished so far in the literature (e.g. 'failed attempt' vs. 'partial success', Tatevosov & Ivanov 2009)? What are the different ways in which culmination can be canceled, across predicate types and languages? To what extent is the typology of non-culminating readings relevant for the ACH?
- How is the typology of predicates that allow non-culminating readings across languages characterized? Which verbs allow/exclude/favour a given non-culminating reading? How can we account for variation across languages or speakers?
- How is the difference between the non-culminating and culminating readings of a verb reflected in morphosyntax, aspect, argument structure, event structure, information structure? What cross-linguistic generalizations emerge?
- Is there experimental evidence from child or adult languages to bear on the ACH? This question is all the more interesting since there is converging crosslinguistic evidence that children as old as 5 tend to construe inherently culminating verbs as non-culminating (van Hout 1998, 2008, Gropen et al. 1991, Wittek 2002, 2008), but virtually all studies on the acquisition of culmination entailments are exclusively based on sentences with agentive subjects (Hodgson 2006, 2010 being an exception).

Submissions should indicate that they are intended for Workshop 2: 'Agent control over non-culminating events.'

Contributors are asked to submit their abstract (max. 500 words, excluding bibliography and figures) using the following website:

www.easychair.org/account/signin.cgi?conf=chronos11

Deadline for abstract submission is October 31, 2013.

Scientific committee:

Daniel Altshuler (Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf)
Leora Bar-El (University of Montana)
Henry Davis (University of British Columbia)
Atle Grønn (Oslo University)
Peter Jacobs (University of Victoria)
Hans Kamp (University of Stuttgart)
Jean-Pierre Koenig (Buffalo University)
Oana Lungu (Université de Nantes)
Lisa Matthewson (University of British Columbia)
Christopher Piñón (Université de Lille 3)
Florian Schäfer (University of Stuttgart)
Sergei Tatevosov (Moscow State University)

The workshop is organized by Hamida Demirdache (LLING, Nantes) and Fabienne Martin (SFB 732, Stuttgart).

Bibliography:

Altshuler, Daniel. 2013. ''There is no neutral aspect'', Proceedings of Semantics and Linguistic Theory 23: 40-62.
Bar-El, L., Davis, H., & Matthewson, L. (2005). On Non-Culminating Accomplishments. In Proceedings of the 35th annual meeting of the North East Linguistic Society (NELS 35) 1. 87-102.
Beavers, J. (2010). Aspectual Analysis of Ditransitive Verbs of Caused Possession in English. Journal of Semantics 28. 1-54.
Demirdache, H. & Martin, F. 2013. Agent control over non-culminating events, Ms.
Fauconnier, S. (2012). Constructional effects of inanimate Agents: a typological study,Doctoral Dissertation, University of Leuven.
Fauconnier, S. (2013). Completives as markers of non-volitionality. Folia Linguistica 47 (1).
Folli, R., & Harley, H. (2005). Flavors of v. In Aspectual inquiries. Springer. 95-120.
Hodgson, M. J. (2010). Locatum Structures and the Acquisition of Telicity. Language Acquisition 17(3), Philadelphia: Psychology Press, 155-182.
Jacobs, P. W. (2011). Control in Skwxwúmesh.  Doctoral Dissertation, University of British  Columbia.
Kiyota, M. (2008). Situation aspect and viewpoint aspect: From Salish to Japanese, Doctoral Dissertation, University of British Columbia.
Koenig, J.P. & Chief, L. (2008). Scalarity and State-Changes in Mandarin, Hindi, Tamil, and  Thai. In O. Bonami and P. Cabredo Hofherr (eds.), Empirical Issues in Syntax and  Semantics 7, Editions du CNRS. 241-262.
Koenig, J. P., & Muansuwan, N. (2000). How to End Without Ever Finishing: Thai Semi-perfectivity. Journal of Semantics 17(2). 147-182.
Martin, F., & Schäfer, F. (2012). The modality of offer and other defeasible causative verbs. Proceedings of the 30th West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics. Somerville, USA: Cascadilla Proceedings Project. 248-258.
Tatevosov, S., & Ivanov, M. (2009). Event structure of non-culminating accomplishments. In L. Hogeweg, H. de Hoop & A. Malchukov (eds.), Cross-linguistic Semantics of Tense, Aspect, and Modality, John Benjamins Publishing Company. 83-129.
Oehrle, R. T. (1976). The grammatical status of the English dative alternation, Doctoral Dissertation, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Schäfer, F. (2012). Two Types of External Argument Licensing-The Case of Causers. Studia Linguistica, 66(2), 128-180.
Singh, M. (1998). On the semantics of the perfective aspect. Natural Language Semantics, Kluwer Academic Publisher, 6(2). 171-199.
Travis, L. (2005). Agents and causes in Malagasy and Tagalog. In N. Erteschik-Shir & T. R. Rapoport (eds.), The Syntax of Aspect, Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Wittek, A. (2002). Learning the meaning of change-of-state verbs: A case study of German child language. Berlin: De Gruyter







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