32.4069, Calls: Cog Sci, Disc Analysis, Ling Theories, Pragmatics, Psycholing/Romania

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LINGUIST List: Vol-32-4069. Thu Dec 30 2021. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 32.4069, Calls: Cog Sci, Disc Analysis, Ling Theories, Pragmatics, Psycholing/Romania

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Date: Thu, 30 Dec 2021 05:32:35
From: Mercedes Villalobos Cardozo [mercedes.villalobos at uclouvain.be]
Subject: Discourse Alignment and Prediction

 
Full Title: Discourse Alignment and Prediction 

Date: 24-Aug-2022 - 27-Aug-2022
Location: Bucharest, Romania 
Contact Person: Mercedes Villalobos Cardozo
Meeting Email: mercedes.villalobos at uclouvain.be

Linguistic Field(s): Cognitive Science; Discourse Analysis; Linguistic Theories; Pragmatics; Psycholinguistics 

Call Deadline: 15-Jan-2022 

Meeting Description:

In the course of (spontaneous) interaction, interlocutors tend to converge
onto the same mental representation of the topic in a process called
interactive alignment, a phenomenon that can be explicitly observed when
interlocutors mimic each other’s verbal or nonverbal choices (Pickering &
Garrod, 2004; Rasenberg et al., 2020). Meanwhile, to varying degrees, people
tend to predict upcoming information before encountering it (Clark, 2013).
Although once debated (see Kuperberg & Jaeger, 2016, for an overview) it is
now accepted that speakers are able to predict on different levels (Huettig,
2015). Particularly, work on discourse suggests, amongst other things, that
upcoming content (van Bergen & Bosker, 2018; Bosker et al., 2014), discourse
structure (Scholman et al., 2017) and turn end (Bögels, & Torreira, 2015;
Ruiter et al., 2006) are some of the phenomena speakers are able to predict.
There is mounting evidence that both alignment and prediction make
conversation easy, and a link between them in dialogue is expectable
(Pickering & Garrod, 2021).

However, most studies concluded the findings about alignment based on rather
decontextualized language production (see Garrod et al., 2018, for an
overview), thus representing language, intentionally or unintentionally, as a
relatively static unimodal system of categories and abstract descriptive rules
that can be analysed within a clause range. In fact, in spontaneous
communication, interlocutors need to package propositional thought based on
the hierarchy of speech forms, structural units and nonverbal semiotics on the
one hand (Bock & Levelt, 1994; McNeill, 1992), while dealing with the situated
interactional issues on the other (Haselow, 2017). The dynamicity and
multimodality of spontaneous spoken language communication have lead scholars
to conclude that spoken discourse develops in a radically different way from
how scripted language is produced, which in turn triggered a battery of
proposals for how spoken discourse should be adequately described (Chafe,
1994; Du Bois, 2014; Haselow, 2017). Yet, despite these many proposals, we
still know surprisingly little of the way alignment is observable at the
discourse level in dialogue. Given the scarce understanding of discourse
alignment, the predictive discourse comprehension process is still unclear
accordingly. 

To make progress on these questions and voids, we believe it is necessary to
gather contributions from multidisciplinary approaches, such as corpus work,
lab-controlled experiments, statistical analysis and computational modeling
methods, in an attempt to achieve a more clear and complete vision of the
dynamics of these phenomena in natural conversation.


2nd Call for Papers:

Call for papers for WS3 ''Discourse alignment and prediction'', to be held
from August 24-27 in Bucharest, Romania, as part of the 55th Annual Meeting of
the Societas Linguistica Europaea (https://societaslinguistica.eu/sle2022/).
Deadline for submission is January 15th 2022. 

We invite you to submit your 500 word abstract in Easychair using the
following link: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=sle2022. When
submitting your abstract, please select ''Discourse alignment and prediction''
as the WS it belongs to.
 
Guidelines about what abstracts should contain can be found here:
https://societaslinguistica.eu/sle2022/third-call-for-papers/. For practical
information on how to submit, please visit
https://societaslinguistica.eu/sle2022/abstract-submission/.
 
Some requirements of SLE:

1) you have to be SLE member to submit an abstract. For SLE membership, please
go to https://societaslinguistica.eu/membership.  
2) one person may be the first author of only one submission of any kind
(workshop paper, general session paper, poster, or workshop proposal). It is
possible to co-author more than two papers.

For details, see Call for papers and FAQ No. 14 on
http://www.sle2021.eu/faq#question14.

If further questions arise, please do not hesitate to contact us at these
addresses: mercedes.villalobos at uclouvain.be | junfei.hu at uclouvain.be




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