30.2537, Calls: Applied Ling, Comp Ling, Forensic Ling, Gen Ling, Text/Corpus Ling/India

The LINGUIST List linguist at listserv.linguistlist.org
Mon Jun 24 22:43:09 UTC 2019


LINGUIST List: Vol-30-2537. Mon Jun 24 2019. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 30.2537, Calls: Applied Ling, Comp Ling, Forensic Ling, Gen Ling, Text/Corpus Ling/India

Moderator: Malgorzata E. Cavar (linguist at linguistlist.org)
Student Moderator: Jeremy Coburn
Managing Editor: Becca Morris
Team: Helen Aristar-Dry, Everett Green, Sarah Robinson, Peace Han, Nils Hjortnaes, Yiwen Zhang, Julian Dietrich
Jobs: jobs at linguistlist.org | Conferences: callconf at linguistlist.org | Pubs: pubs at linguistlist.org

Homepage: http://linguistlist.org

Please support the LL editors and operation with a donation at:
           https://funddrive.linguistlist.org/donate/

Editor for this issue: Everett Green <everett at linguistlist.org>
================================================================


Date: Mon, 24 Jun 2019 18:40:48
From: Hari Madhab Ray [harimadhabray at gmail.com]
Subject: Two Days Seminar cum Workshop on Forensic and Corpus Linguistics

 
Full Title: Two Days Seminar cum Workshop on Forensic and Corpus Linguistics 
Short Title: SCWFCL-2019 

Date: 09-Aug-2019 - 10-Aug-2019
Location: Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India 
Contact Person: Hari Madhab Ray
Meeting Email: secuwofocoling2019 at gmail.com

Linguistic Field(s): Applied Linguistics; Computational Linguistics; Forensic Linguistics; General Linguistics; Text/Corpus Linguistics 

Call Deadline: 20-Jul-2019 

Meeting Description:

Two days Seminar-cum-workshop on Forensic and Corpus Linguistics (SCWFCL-2019)

1. National Seminar on Linguistics and Language Sciences in India (NASLILANSI)
2. Workshop-1 Trends and Issues in Forensic Phonetics in India: Understanding
Speaker Classification and Speaker Identification
3. Workshop-2 Language Corpora Generation, Processing, & Utilization in
Various Domains of Linguistics and Language Technology

On August 9-10, 2019 in Collaboration with Central Institute of Indian
Languages, Mysore, India 

Venue: Centre for Linguistics, SLL&CS, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi,
India

The Centre for Linguistics, School of Languages, Literature & Culture Studies,
Jawaharlal Nehru University is pleased to announce that  a two-day
seminar-cum-workshop on Forensic and Corpus Linguistics will be held on 9th
and 10th August, 2019 in JNU in collaboration with Central Institute of Indian
Languages, Mysore, India. The aim of the two days seminar-cum-workshop is to
look at Linguistics beyond the classroom, its expansion and application in the
real-world language related phenomena. The selected participants will present
their papers/posters in the national seminar and also able to participate in
the workshops. The 1st  workshop will focus on intensively different aspects
of Forensic Linguistics namely forensic phonetics and speaker identification,
speaker classification, deception and fraud. The 2nd workshop will address
linguistic issues in the adaptation of language resources and tools in Corpus
Linguistics mainly focusing on corpus methodologies and application of corpus
linguistics (See the details below). We will work with authentic data and use
of real cases to illustrate theory. We wish high degree of participant
involvement and encourage critical enquiry and debate related to theoretical
issues in Linguistics and practical language related phenomena.


Call for Papers:

National Seminar on  Linguistics and Language Sciences in India (NASLILANSI)

Linguistics is a growing and exciting field of study of human natural
language. It is a systemic or scientific investigation of human knowledge or
science of languages. It has important impacts and very strong influence on
diverse fields such as education, psychology, anthropology, sociology,
language technology, philosophy, computer science, neuroscience, artificial
intelligence, translation, language technology, genetics and so on. All
students of language will admit that the last one hundred years of research in
and on various aspects of human language have transformed our understanding of
language in a significant way. The tools, techniques, methods and survey
instruments that are available today were unthinkable hundred years ago. The
theoretical advances in linguistics and language sciences, as well as the
overall growth of social sciences, genetics, cognitive sciences and computer
sciences now enable radically new and exhaustive methods of investigation and
description of the social and biological aspect of human language. While
linguists can now deliver comprehensive descriptions of the linguistic
diversity of a country like India, their investigations invariable have more
scientific implications, as knowledge of language is a unique species-specific
cognitive ability and as such a window into the biology of being human.

The discipline-Linguistics has changed radically in the last one hundred
years, technological innovations and globalizations have had major impact on
the discipline. Linguistic insights and theories were incorporated in
different disciplines, many subbranches of linguistics emerged to cater to the
need of the hours such as Sociolinguistics, Neurolinguistics,
Psycholinguistics, Anthropological linguistics, Statistical linguistics,
Glossogenetics, Historical linguistics, Forensic linguistics, Corpus
Linguistics and broadly Applied Linguistics to deal with more  practical
concerns and issues  where language plays an important role in life.    

Important Dates:

Last date of Abstract submission: 20 July, 2019
Acceptance notification: 25 July, 2019
Full length paper submission: 31 July, 2019
Last date of registration: 1 August, 2019 

Abstracts:

Prospective authors are invited to submit abstracts for oral and poster
presentations on all aspects of theoretical and applied linguistics. They may
submit their original and unpublished research in the following areas:

Applied Linguistics, Forensic Linguistics, Corpus Linguistics, Language
Technology, Natural Language processing, Language planning, Machine
Translation, Lexicography, Language Teaching, Clinical Linguistics, Language
and Politics, Discourse Analysis, Stylistics, Morphology, Sociolinguistics,
Language Contact, Sign Language, Folklore, Education, Cognitive Linguistics,
Phonetics and Phonology, Language Documentation, Endangered Languages, Areal
Typology, Evolutionary linguistics, Geo-linguistics, Writing grammar, Language
and Communication.

The abstract should be limited to 500 words excluding references typed in MS
Word, Times New Roman, 11 pt. font, single spacing with one inch margins on
all sides. The abstract must be anonymous, it must not include the name of the
authors, affiliations, designations and etc.

The authors must indicate their choice for oral or poster presentations. Only
one single authored or joined authored abstract will be considered for peer
reviewed process. The interested participants must send an email for their
interest to participate in the workshop. The abstracts and email should be
sent to the following email id: secuwofocoling2019 at gmail.com




------------------------------------------------------------------------------

***************************    LINGUIST List Support    ***************************
 The 2019 Fund Drive is under way! Please visit https://funddrive.linguistlist.org
  to find out how to donate and check how your university, country or discipline
     ranks in the fund drive challenges. Or go directly to the donation site:
               https://iufoundation.fundly.com/the-linguist-list-2019

                        Let's make this a short fund drive!
                Please feel free to share the link to our campaign:
                    https://funddrive.linguistlist.org/donate/
 


----------------------------------------------------------
LINGUIST List: Vol-30-2537	
----------------------------------------------------------






More information about the LINGUIST mailing list