33.1898, Calls: Disc Analysis, Pragmatics, Psycholing, Text/Corpus Ling/Switzerland

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LINGUIST List: Vol-33-1898. Mon May 30 2022. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 33.1898, Calls: Disc Analysis, Pragmatics, Psycholing, Text/Corpus Ling/Switzerland

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Date: Mon, 30 May 2022 00:39:48
From: Ekaterina Tskhovrebova [ekaterina.tckhovrebova at unibe.ch]
Subject: DisCorX 2022

 
Full Title: DisCorX 2022 

Date: 17-Nov-2022 - 18-Nov-2022
Location: Berne, Switzerland 
Contact Person: Mathis Wetzel
Meeting Email: mathis.wetzel at unibe.ch

Linguistic Field(s): Discourse Analysis; Pragmatics; Psycholinguistics; Text/Corpus Linguistics 

Call Deadline: 31-May-2022 

Meeting Description:

The DisCorX 2022 workshop focuses on discourse through the lens of cognitive
corpus linguistics and psycholinguistics. It is a follow-up from DisCorX 2020
organized by Dr. Ludivine Crible. The goal is to provide researchers working
on discourse an opportunity to exchange state-of-the-art research regarding
the production, comprehension and processing of discourse, both for L1 and L2
speakers. Focus will be placed on questions linked to:
- the way native and non-native readers make sense of discourse by using (or
not) cues and signals of coherence relations
- individual differences in the interpretation of discourse relations
- the way native and non-native readers interpret and acquire pragmatic
functions of discourse connectives 

As such, our workshop targets underlying cognitive principles and general
assumptions about the way we read and process coherence relations as well as
more specific factors that influence the way we produce, process and
understand discourse.


Final Call for Papers:

Dear colleagues,  We would like to remind you about our workshop DisCorX2.0 to
be held at the University of Bern (Switzerland) on the 17th and 18th November.

The DisCorX 2022 workshop focuses on discourse through the lens of cognitive
corpus linguistics and
psycholinguistics. It is a follow-up from DisCorX 2020 organized by Dr.
Ludivine Crible. The goal is to provide
researchers working on discourse an opportunity to exchange state-of-the-art
research regarding the
production, comprehension and processing of discourse, both for L1 and L2
speakers. Focus will be placed
on questions linked to:
- the way native and non-native readers make sense of discourse by using (or
not) cues and signals of
coherence relations
- individual differences in the interpretation of discourse relations
- the way native and non-native readers interpret and acquire pragmatic
functions of discourse
connectives

As such, our workshop targets underlying cognitive principles and general
assumptions about the way we
read and process coherence relations as well as more specific factors that
influence the way we produce,
process and understand discourse.

We encourage submissions on the following topics:
- categories of coherence relations
- categories of discourse signals
- second language acquisition of connectives
- processing of coherence relations in a L2
- polyfunctionality, ambiguity, information density
- implicit vs explicit relations

Modalities for submissions
Abstract for 20-minute presentations (+ 10 minutes discussion) should not
exceed 500 words
(excluding references) in.doc, docx or .pdf format.

Please submit your abstract via Easy-Chair:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=discorx20

Deadline for abstract submission
31 May, 2022

Venue
The workshop will be held on November17-18, 2022 at the University of Bern
(Switzerland). Changes,
restrictions or sanitary measures due to the pandemic situation may apply and
will be communicated as early
as possible.

Organizers
Ekaterina Tskhovrebova, Mathis Wetzel, Prof. Dr. Sandrine Zufferey
(University of Bern)

Invited Speakers
Prof. Dr. Kate Cain (Lancaster University)
Dr. Hanna Rohde (University of Edinburgh)

Contact
ekaterina.tckhovrebova at unibe.ch
mathis.wetzel at unibe.ch




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