30.1810, Calls: Cog Sci, Historical Ling, Lang Acquisition, Ling Theories, Socioling/United Kingdom

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Sat Apr 27 08:07:10 UTC 2019


LINGUIST List: Vol-30-1810. Sat Apr 27 2019. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 30.1810, Calls: Cog Sci, Historical Ling, Lang Acquisition, Ling Theories, Socioling/United Kingdom

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Editor for this issue: Everett Green <everett at linguistlist.org>
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Date: Sat, 27 Apr 2019 04:06:14
From: Henri Kauhanen [henri.kauhanen at manchester.ac.uk]
Subject: Symposium on Representations, Usage and Social Embedding in Language Change

 
Full Title: Symposium on Representations, Usage and Social Embedding in Language Change 
Short Title: RUSE 2019 

Date: 20-Aug-2019 - 21-Aug-2019
Location: Manchester, United Kingdom 
Contact Person: Henri Kauhanen
Meeting Email: rusesymposium at gmail.com
Web Site: http://rusesymposium.org.uk 

Linguistic Field(s): Cognitive Science; Historical Linguistics; Language Acquisition; Linguistic Theories; Sociolinguistics 

Call Deadline: 10-May-2019 

Meeting Description:

Different theories and models attribute linguistic variation and change to
different causes. Currently, significant tension exists between approaches
that explain variation and change in terms of a parametric approach to the
structure of grammar and the language learner’s interaction with primary
linguistic data, and approaches that instead derive variation and change from
usage effects and the social embedding of language. The two-day long symposium
is devoted to addressing this tension in an effort to arrive at a better
understanding of the status quo of research on language variation and change,
and to outline the most fruitful ways forward towards formal models that make
quantitative, empirically testable predictions.

Keynote speakers:

Ricardo Bermúdez-Otero, University of Manchester
Richard A. Blythe, University of Edinburgh
Janet B. Pierrehumbert, University of Oxford


Call for Papers:

Abstracts are invited for both oral (20 minutes, plus 10 minutes for
discussion) and poster presentations. Questions to be addressed may include,
but are not limited to:

- What role do abstract representations play in language change?
- How do acquisition and usage interact to produce patterns of variation and
change?
- How can acquisition and usage effects be detected in diachronic data?
- What role do frequency effects play in language change?
- What is the basic replicator in the cultural evolution of language?
- How can social network theory inform models of linguistic variation and
change?
- What is the effect of individual lifespan change on variation and change on
the level of the speech community?
- How can current mathematical and computational models of variation and
change be scaled up towards more linguistic and sociological realism?
- Is a unified approach to language change, incorporating both a theory of
representations and a theory of usage, necessary to fully explain variation
and change? Is such an approach possible, in principle?

Both theoretical/computational and empirical contributions are welcome, as is
work in progress. Abstracts must be anonymous, in PDF format and a maximum of
2 A4 pages in length (1 page text, 1 page figures, examples and references).
Submissions are peer-reviewed (double blind) by an international panel of
experts.

Extended deadline for submissions: 10 May 2019
Notification of acceptance: late May 2019

Submit your abstract: http://rusesymposium.org.uk/cfp/




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