31.135, Confs: Cog Sci, Ling Theories, Neuroling, Pragmatics, Psycholing, Semantics / Germany

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LINGUIST List: Vol-31-135. Thu Jan 09 2020. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 31.135, Confs: Cog Sci, Ling Theories, Neuroling, Pragmatics, Psycholing, Semantics / Germany

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Date: Thu, 09 Jan 2020 17:57:16
From: Giuliano Armenante [giuliano.armenante at uni-tuebingen.de]
Subject: Processing Presuppositions: Theoretical and Methodological Approaches

 
Processing Presuppositions: Theoretical and Methodological Approaches 

Date: 12-Mar-2020 - 13-Mar-2020 
Location: Tuebingen, Germany 
Contact: Giuliano Armenante 
Contact Email: pspprocessing at sfb833.uni-tuebingen.de 
Meeting URL: https://bit.ly/2t1iUyY 

Linguistic Field(s): Cognitive Science; Linguistic Theories; Neurolinguistics; Pragmatics; Psycholinguistics; Semantics 

Meeting Description: 

The workshop “Processing Presuppositions: Theoretical and Methodological
Approaches” is organized by Projects B1 and B2 of the SFB 833 “The
Construction of Meaning” and will be held in Tübingen, Germany, on March
12-13, 2020.

The workshop provides a forum for researchers investigating
presupposition-related phenomena and intends to contribute to the debate on
long-standing issues of the theory in light of the empirical evidence provided
by psycho- and neurolinguistic methods.

Workshop venue: Schloss Hohentübingen, Burgsteige 11, 72070 Tübingen
Workshop registration: pspprocessing at sfb833.uni-tuebingen.de (Please, register
before March 2, 2020)

Invited Speakers:

Nadine Bade (ENS Paris)
Chris Cummins (University of Edinburgh)
Simona Di Paola (University of Genoa)
Jakub Dotlačil (University of Amsterdam)
Jacopo Romoli (Ulster University)
Philippe Schlenker (Institut Jean-Nicod, CNRS; New York University)
Einat Shetreet (Tel Aviv University)

Organizers: G. Armenante, P. Augurzky, N. Balbach, O. Bott, M. Franke, G.
Jäger, M. Janczyk, F. Schlotterbeck, C. Schneider, B. Stolterfoht, R. Ulrich.

Description:

Presuppositions have received considerable attention in linguistic theory over
the past decades, with a surge of experimental work in this domain in recent
years.

Most work on presupposition theory has focused on two main issues: ‘the
triggering problem’ (Abrusán, 2016; Beaver, 1997; Schwarz, 2016) and ‘the
projection problem’ (Beaver, 1997; Schwarz, 2016). While the former is
associated with the source of presuppositional content, which has been argued
to stem from lexical material (the semantic view; e.g., Frege, 1892 and
Strawson, 1950) or from expectations formed by discourse participants (the
pragmatic view; see Stalnaker, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1998), the latter is
concerned with when and why presuppositions in embedded clauses can be
maintained - an issue that is still under debate.

Although no consensus has thus been reached on a viable theory of
presupposition, empirical research has grown in importance by drawing from
psycholinguistic methods. These, in return, provide means to test subtle
predictions of various competing theoretical proposals and enhance our
understanding of natural language processing (e.g., Brasoveanu & Dotlačil,
2015; Chemla & Schlenker, 2012; Domaneschi & Di Paola, 2018; Schwarz, 2015;
Schwarz & Tiemann, 2017; Shetreet, Alexander, Romoli, Chierchia & Kuperberg,
2019). To this end,  the time course of presupposition processing promises to
offer insights that are essential to the modeling of incrementality.

The workshop aims at providing a forum for those scholars whose research
tackles current issues in presupposition theory and is especially grounded in
empirical evidence. Topics to be discussed include:

- Incremental and predictive processing of presupposition resolution
- Presupposition projection and accommodation
- Processing of presuppositions in relation to other pragmatic inferences
- Appropriateness of experimental methods used to test predictions for
presupposition-related phenomena

For further information, please visit our website:
https://uni-tuebingen.de/forschung/forschungsschwerpunkte/sonderforschungsbere
iche/sfb-833/forschungsprojekte/b2-bottfrankejaegerjanczyk/workshop-2020/
 






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