33.2011, Calls: Morphology, Phonology, Psycholinguistics, Sociolinguistics, Neurolinguistics, Cognitive Science / Terminology (Jrnl)

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Wed Jun 15 23:42:54 UTC 2022


LINGUIST List: Vol-33-2011. Wed Jun 15 2022. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 33.2011, Calls:  Morphology, Phonology, Psycholinguistics, Sociolinguistics, Neurolinguistics, Cognitive Science / Terminology (Jrnl)

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Date: Wed, 15 Jun 2022 23:42:46
From: Noury Bakrim [bakrim_noureddine at yahoo.fr]
Subject: Morphology, Phonology, Psycholinguistics, Sociolinguistics, Neurolinguistics, Cognitive Science / Terminology (Jrnl)

 
Full Title: Terminology 


Linguistic Field(s): Cognitive Science; Morphology; Neurolinguistics; Phonology; Psycholinguistics; Sociolinguistics 

Subject Language(s): !O!ung (oun)

Language Family(ies): Berber 

Call Deadline: 15-Mar-2023 

Call for Papers:

Call information: www.journaloflanguage.org/si/index/501041 

New developments in mathematical linguistics and its applications cover a wide
range of subjects dominated by automated and Artificial Intelligence
applications (neural networks), creating thus a disproportionate development
between theoretical-empirical and applied significance of
logical-mathematical/bio-mathematical models. However, we notice more
theoretical-empirical metaphorism on one side and increasing technological
usefulness on the other side. Considering both orientations of the Speaker and
the Analyst, this special issue aims at bridging this gap by a common search
of a unified frame (or its epistemic debate from abductive, deductive and
inductive relations) in which both distinction and coherence are sought
between logical-mathematical and bio-mathematical verifiability and
applicability of the language/linguistic object throughout models discussing
possible hierarchies and/or representational dynamics between  universality,
typology/ individual patterns, realization/configuration (text models),
social/ideological relevance and inter-linguistic modeling meta-languages
(translatology, acquisition).

Furthermore, we seek in this issue a new contribution of automated models to a
reflexive redefinition of the language-linguistic object partaking in the same
endeavor. One of the main motivations at stake is the existing significance of
a common and comparable search in both descriptive robustness and unified
models from Language-Linguistic sciences (the refinement of the minimalistic
device by graph theory for instance) and Mathematics (the search of a unified
mathematical structure between Set, Category and Type theories). 

We welcome significant, authentic and high-quality papers with novel
theoretical, empirical, epistemic and applied approaches: 
- From mathematical languages, especially conceptual and epistemic Mathematics
(Discrete Mathematics, Category and Type Theories, graph theory….)
- From Logical dimensions of the link between logical-inferential models and
their pragmatic transformation to trivial languages (especially syntactic and
semantic elements and propositional models).
- From Language Processing and Programming (Deep Learning, recognition
automata etc etc) 
- From Bio-linguistic models including (but not restricted to) modern
approaches in minimalistic bio-linguistics (core syntax)  
- From Neuro-linguistics and Brain models
- From Cognitive and psycho-linguistic approaches (Lexical Memory graphs,
Semantic networks etc etc)
- From applied Mathematics and quantitative/qualitative approaches in corpus
and text linguistics (stochastic distribution), semantics, sociolinguistics
(variation measures and statistics), pragmatic modeling of interactions (for
instance, proxemic modeling) and  phonology-phonetics (especially geometries,
feature-element debates, representational devices), double articulation and
morpho-phonology, syntax and sequence models of recursion, lexicometry and
lexicography (concordancers), discourse analysis (predictive models of
sentiments for instance) etc etc etc
- From semiotic models (synthetic vs analytical dimensions of meaning)
- From Translatology and its processing models or any mathematical attempt to
understand translation meta-languages
Author contributions and submitted papers may preferably vary but should be
adequate to the following format : 
- Original research articles with working hypotheses and tested models 
- Short reports enabling the description of a research area along with
experiments and findings 
- Reviews and summaries of publications
- Case Studies : scrutinizing specific phenomena, parameters with novel
approaches
- Methods/Methodology : presenting new methods and their optimal mediation




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