26.4120, Calls: Cognitive Sci, General Ling, Lang Acquisition, Psycholing, Syntax/UK

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LINGUIST List: Vol-26-4120. Thu Sep 17 2015. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 26.4120, Calls: Cognitive Sci, General Ling, Lang Acquisition, Psycholing, Syntax/UK

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Date: Thu, 17 Sep 2015 22:34:41
From: Diane Nelson [d.c.nelson at leeds.ac.uk]
Subject: Workshop on Animacy in Language and Cognition

 
Full Title: Workshop on Animacy in Language and Cognition 

Date: 09-Nov-2015 - 09-Nov-2015
Location: University of Leeds, West Yorkshire, United Kingdom 
Contact Person: Diane Nelson
Meeting Email: d.c.nelson at leeds.ac.uk
Web Site: http://www.lagb.org.uk/forum/3447710 

Linguistic Field(s): Cognitive Science; General Linguistics; Language Acquisition; Psycholinguistics; Syntax 

Call Deadline: 22-Sep-2015 

Meeting Description:

We invite abstracts of contributions for an interdisciplinary workshop on Animacy in Language and Cognition, to take place on 9 November 2015 at the University of Leeds. 

The workshop aims to bring together researchers from linguistics and other disciplines in order to explore the relationship between language and animacy and further our understanding of the role of animacy in human language(s) and cognition. We welcome papers which take a broader theoretical and interdisciplinary approach to animacy effects on language or cognition in order to explore questions such as the following:

- How did the cognitive underpinnings of animacy evolve in our primate ancestors, and how did this interact with the emergence and evolution of language?
- How does the cognitive development of distinctions based on animacy shape and support language acquisition?
- To what extent should animacy be seen as a linguistic feature independent of contrasts related to personhood or prominence, including definiteness, individuation vs collectivity, specificity, etc.?
- Animacy effects related to the human vs non-human contrast are well-attested in human grammars, but what sorts of linguistic contrasts do we find based on distinctions at the lower end of the animacy hierarchy?
- Can generative linguists increase the descriptive adequacy of their models by invoking gradience or other non-binary feature specification in analysing animacy effects?
- How does folkbiological classification of biological animacy in the natural world map onto linguistic animacy hierarchies?

Organisers: 

Diane Nelson, Linguistics and Phonetics, School of Languages, Cultures and Societies, University of Leeds
Virve Vihman, School of Psychological Sciences, University of Manchester

For more information on the workshop, please see http://www.lagb.org.uk/forum/3447710

Final Call for Papers:

Deadline for abstracts extended to 22 September 2015.

Please see the workshop website for full details at https://animacyleeds.wordpress.com/

Organisers: 

Diane Nelson, Linguistics and Phonetics, School of Languages, Cultures and Societies, University of Leeds
Virve Vihman, School of Psychological Sciences, University of Manchester




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