27.207, Confs: Psycholing/Germany

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LINGUIST List: Vol-27-207. Tue Jan 12 2016. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 27.207, Confs: Psycholing/Germany

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Date: Tue, 12 Jan 2016 12:16:53
From: Tom Fritzsche [tom.fritzsche at uni-potsdam.de]
Subject: The Attentive Listener in the Visual World

 
The Attentive Listener in the Visual World 
Short Title: ATTLIS 

Date: 10-Mar-2016 - 11-Mar-2016 
Location: Potsdam, Germany 
Contact: Tom Fritzsche 
Contact Email: attlis2016 at uni-potsdam.de 
Meeting URL: https://sites.google.com/site/theattentivelistener/attlis2016 

Linguistic Field(s): Psycholinguistics 

Meeting Description: 

The workshop's theme is multi-modal cognition with an emphasis on the
interaction between language and vision. More specifically, there is a central
focus on how attentional and visual processes interact with spoken and written
language processing. Why are attention and vision crucial to language
comprehension? Prominent approaches to language-vision interactions have
focused so far on whether language processing is like sensory processing (the
'embodied cognition approach') or whether cross-linguistic differences lead to
permanent restructuring of cognition and perception (the 'linguistic
relativity approach'). We know, however surprisingly little about the nature,
representations, and mechanisms of every-day language-vision interactions such
as when language guides our attention around the visual world. Core themes of
the workshop are the (non)-intentionality of language-vision interactions, the
nature of competition, selective processing, learning and development which
suggest that the investigation of language-vision interactions by means of
methods such as eye-tracking offers a window into the mechanisms of how high
level representations involved in language and memory interact with visual
input. The workshop seeks to encourage discussions which advance the field in
important ways and lead to close collaborations between the participating
researchers.

Invited Speakers:

- Jesse Snedeker (Harvard University, USA)
- Christoph Scheepers (University of Glasgow, UK)
- Nicole Altvater-Mackensen (MPI for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences,
Leipzig, Germany)

The program will be available on the conference website.
 

Program:

The full program can be found on the conference website:
http://www.uni-potsdam.de/attlis2016/program.html

Online registration is open:
http://www.uni-potsdam.de/attlis2016/registration.html

Keynotes:

Jesse Snedeker (Harvard University)
t.b.a.

Christoph Scheepers (University of Glasgow)
t.b.a.

Nicole Altvater-Mackensen (MPI for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences,
Leipzig)
Audiovisual speech perception in infants

Reinhold Kliegl (University of Potsdam)
Parsimonious Mixed Models in Psycholinguistic Research

Talks:

Thu 10 March 11am-1pm
Session 1: Sentence Processing:

Aine Ito, Martin Corley & Martin Pickering (University of Edinburgh)
Predicting phonological information in L1 and L2

Juliane Burmester, Katharina Spalek & Isabell Wartenburger (Universität
Potsdam, HU Berlin)
How verbal vs. visual-perceptual cues affect sentence comprehension

Almut Ketzer-Nöltge, Judith Schweppe & Ralf Rummer (Universität Erfurt)
Do eye-movement patterns change under different task demands? Processing
sentences for comprehension and for recall

Katja Münster & Pia Knoeferle (Citec, University of Bielefeld, HU-Berlin)
The age of the listener modulates the integration of non-linguistic cues into
language processing

Thu 10 March 2pm-4pm
Session 2: Different Populations:

Katalin Tamasi, Cristina McKean, Adamantios Gafos & Barbara Höhle (Universität
Potsdam, Newcastle University)
Sensitivity to degrees of mispronunciation: Enriching the preferential looking
paradigm with pupillometry

Elodie Léger, Philippe Prévost, Laurie Tuller, Nadia Aguillon-Hernandez,
Frédérique Bonnet-Brilhault & Joëlle Malvy (UMR Inserm 930 Team 'Autism',
University of Tours)
Real-time interpretation of grammatical cues in ASD: On the track of the
French object clitic

Silke Telkemeyer, Katja Liebal & Isabell Wartenburger (Universität Potsdam,
Freie Universität Berlin)
The Impact of emotional facial expressions on auditory change perception
across the lifespan

Caroline Junge, Karlijn Blommers & Sascha Couvee (Utrecht University,
University of Amsterdam)
Speaker familiarity aids both novel word encoding and mapping: ERP evidence

Fri 11 March 11am-1pm
Session 3: Intention, Informativity, Pragmatics:

Catherine Davies & Helene Kreysa (University of Leeds,
Friedrich-Schiller-University of Jena)
Do informative speakers always fixate a contrast object during speech
planning?

Francesca Foppolo, Marco Marelli, Stefania Donatiello & Damiano Piattella
(University of Milano-Bicocca, CIMeC-University of Trento)
Focus on Scalar Implicatures: An eye-tracking study

Ross Macdonald & Maria Staudte (Saarland University)
Language, gaze and shared intention

Anita Slonimska, Asli Ozyurek & Emanuela Campisi (Radboud University Nijmegen,
Max Planck Institute for Psycolinguistics, Lund University)
The role of addressee's age in use of ostensive signals to gestures and their
effectiveness in a multimodal demonstration task

Fri 11 March 2pm-4pm
Session 4: Word Processing:

Alamri Abdulrahman & Tania Zamuner (University of Ottawa, King Saud
University)
Phonological, semantic and root activation in spoken word recognition in
Arabic: An eye-tracking study

Anita Wagner, Paolo Toffanin & Deniz Başkent (UMCG Groningen)
Attentional engagement versus effort in lexical access

Ramesh Mishra & Seema Prasad (University of Hyderabad)
Language mediated eye movements under a working memory load

Markus Ostarek & Falk Huettig (Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics,
Nijmegen)
Sensory representations are causally involved in cognition but only when the
task requires it

Posters:

Johannes Gerwien & Martha Rudka (Universität Heidelberg)
Using the visual world paradigm to study the online processing of the German
scalar focus particles

Friederike Voß, Mila Vulchanova, Pia Knoeferle & Hendrik Eshuis (NTNU,
Bielefeld University)
Influence of depicted actions and information structure on pronoun resolution
in German children

Dietha Koster, Teresa Cadierno & Kenny Coventry (University of Southern
Denmark, University of East Anglia)
Visual and linguistic information processing in L1 and L2 speakers

Sophie ter Schure, Caroline Junge & Paul Boersma (University of Amsterdam,
Utrecht University)
Learning a non-native vowel contrast: Comparing effects of multimodal,
auditory and visual streams of information on infants' scanning patterns and
discrimination abilities

Maria Teixido & Laura Bosch (Universitat de Barcelona)
Exploring simultaneous word segmentation and word-referent mapping: Can pupil
dilation explain differences between 6- and 9-month-old infants?

Yipu Wei & Pim Mak (Utrecht institute of Linguistics, Utrecht University)
The processing of subjectivity in coherence relations: evidence from the
visual world paradigm

Jean-Loup Gilis, Sabine Burfin, Christophe Savariaux, Silvain Gerber & Sonia
Kandel (Université Grenoble Alpes, CNRS UMR 5105, CNRS UMR 5216)
The impact of visual speech on phoneme identification: New data with a high
speed camera

Brian Sullivan, Harm Brouwer, Alba Rodriguez, Ricardo Matos, Matthew Crocker &
Pia Knoeferle (Tobii AB, Saarland University, Bielefeld University)
Eye movements during visual–verbal conflicts

Nikolina Koleva & Maria Staudte (Saarland University)
Spontaneous spoken instructions and listener's gaze availability in a dynamic
real-world environment

Helen Engemann & Coralie Vincent (Goethe-Universität Frankfurt a.M.,
CNRS/Université 8 Paris)
Conceptualization in process: Eye-movements as window into motion event
processing in English and French children and adults

Alma Luz Rodríguez-Lázaro, Natalia Arias-Trejo & Alina María
Signoret-Dorcasberro (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)
Lexical processing in EFL bilinguals in Mexico: Preliminary results provided
by a visual word task

Sabine Reuters, Sarah Verlage & Martina Penke (Universität zu Köln)
Animacy effects in German sentence production

Weiyi Song (CNRS / Université Aix-Marseille)
Errors produced during dictation writing in French learners of Chinese

Jun Ikeda (University of Tsukuba)
Early Visual and Linguistic Processing of a Deep Orthography: An ERP Study of
Hebrew





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