FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS - AFLiCo 5

annie.risler at FREE.FR annie.risler at FREE.FR
Fri Jul 20 20:36:24 UTC 2012


FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS - AFLiCo 5

“Empirical Approaches to Multi-modality and to Language Variation”

Fifth International Conference of the Association Française de Linguistique Cognitive 
(AFLiCo 5)

University of Lille 3, Lille, France
May 15-17, 2013
http://evenements.univ-lille3.fr/aflico5

PLENARY SPEAKERS (titles and abstracts on conference web site)
Dagmar Divjak (University of Sheffield)
Colette Grinevald (University of Lyon 2)
Irene Mittelberg (RWTH Aachen University)
Gary Morgan (City University London)
François Rastier (CNRS and INALCO Paris)
Luc Steels (ICREA (IBE-UPF-CSIC) BARCELONA & SONY CSL PARIS)

OBJECTIVES
This conference chiefly aims at consolidating and strengthening the network of cognitive linguists working in France and abroad by providing a forum for discussion and collaboration in the tradition of the preceding AFLiCo conferences in Bordeaux (2005), Lille (2007), Nanterre (2009) and Lyon (2011) and the ‘JET’ workshops in Bordeaux (2010) and Paris (2012).

THEMATIC SESSIONS
This conference will be the fifth international conference of the Association Française de Linguistique Cognitive (AFLiCo; www.aflico.fr). The conference’s major foci are in line with the direction the previous AFLiCo conferences were headed in: multi-modality (in particular, co-verbal gestures and signed languages viewed as multi-channel communication systems) and linguistic variation (typology as well as intra-language variation). However, the conference seeks to add an important dimension to this direction, viz. empirical methods in (cognitive) linguistics, which have recently been attracting growing interest. With this emphasis on empirical approaches, the conference meets a real need of the linguistic community (cognitive or otherwise), given that the field of linguistics is shifting ever more rapidly towards interdisciplinary approaches, using various advanced empirical methods, ranging from psycholinguistic experiments to sophisticated analyses based on (large) corpora.

The study of multi-modality recognizes the frequent simultaneous presence of multiple communication channels. In the visual domain, co-verbal gestures underscore the embodied nature of language proposed by cognitive linguistics. In the aural domain, para-verbal aspects of utterances (pitch, intonation, voice quality, etc.) beg the question of how to isolate stable correspondences between these ‘forms’ and semantic (particularly attitudinal) values.

As was the case for the 2007 AFLiCo conference held in Lille, we explicitly welcome proposals for papers on signed languages, which by their very nature are multi-modal communication systems, as the signed utterance is brought about not just by means of hand gestures but also through posture and movements of, inter alia, the upper body, the head, the mouth and the eyebrows. Signed languages provide a window to the human mind and its capacity to represent abstract concepts in concrete, material forms; cognitive linguistics offers a well-suited model to account for iconicity, metaphor and metonymy, which are central to the study of the world’s signed languages. The topic of signed languages ties in with the LSF (langue des signes française) Interpreter training at the University of Lille 3.

Cross-linguistic variation has been the object of typological and comparative cognitive studies which address the issue of universal grammar and linguistic relativity. With regard to intra-language variation, recent years have witnessed the emergence of a cognitive sociolinguistics. Language variation is also a key ingredient in explaining language change and grammaticalization. 

GENERAL SESSIONS
The conference will not be limited to thematic sessions devoted to the main foci described above. The organisers also encourage researchers to submit proposals within other areas of cognitive linguistics, to be presented in the general parallel sessions. Possible topics include (but are not restricted to):
- (cognitive) construction grammar
- conceptual metaphors
- image schemata
- frame semantics
- coercion and the tension between productivity and convention in language
- computer modelling based on empirical data
- problems and solutions in empirical methods: corpus studies, acceptability ratings, response time measurements, event-related potential experiments, eye tracking studies, etc.

The organisers further encourage young researchers to submit an abstract.

NOTE: for organisational reasons, the thematic sessions on signed languages will be grouped on the first day of the conference (15 May).

SUBMISSION PROCEDURE
Abstracts will be submitted to a double, blind review. They should be fully anonymous and not exceed 500 words (references excluded). Details for submission procedure will be available on the website.

IMPORTANT DATES
Submission deadline: November 15, 2012
Notification of acceptance: January 15, 2013
Workshop “Empirical methods in Usage-Based Linguistics”: May 13 and 14, 2013
Conference dates: May 15-17, 2013
(TBC: registration & welcome reception: May 14, from 17:00)

REGISTRATION
Details about the registration procedure and registration deadlines will be posted on the conference website as soon as they become available. There will be reduced registration fee for AFLiCo members and students as well as early bird reduction.

CONFERENCE LANGUAGES 
English (preferred), French, LSF (please notify the organisers in advance)

CONFERENCE WEBSITE 
http://evenements.univ­lille3.fr/aflico5

SPRING SCHOOL
To enhance the success of the empirical dimension, we will organise, pending funding, a Spring School on “Empirical methods in Usage-Based Linguistics” on the two days preceding the conference (i.e. on May 13 and 14) with 5 parallel workshops on different empirical approaches, each presenting a specific methodology or tool:
(1) corpus linguistics: principles and general methods (Dagmar Divjak, University of Sheffield, UK);
(2) statistics in corpus linguistics with R (Dylan Glynn, Lund University, Sweden);
(3) annotating and analysing multi-modal data in ELAN (Mark Tutton, University of Nantes, France);
(4) transcribing and analysing oral data in CLAN (Christophe Parisse, University of Paris 10, France);
(5) methods in psycholinguistic experiments ([to be confirmed]). 
Further details will be posted on the conference website.

ORGANISING COMMITTEE:
Maarten Lemmens, UMR 8163 STL (CNRS and Universities of Lille 3 and Lille 1)
Dany Amiot, UMR 8163 STL (CNRS and Universities of Lille 3 and Lille 1)
Annie Risler, UMR 8163 STL (CNRS and Universities of Lille 3 and Lille 1)
Bert Cappelle, UMR 8163 STL (CNRS and Universities of Lille 3 and Lille 1)

SCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE
Florence Chenu, University of Lyon 2, France
Marion Blondel,  University of Paris 8, France
Jana Bressem, University of Frankfurt an der Oder, Germany
Georgette Dal, University of Lille 3, France
Nicole Delbecque, University of Leuven, Belgium
Walter Demulder, University of Antwerp, Belgium
Guillaume Desagulier, University of Paris 8
Elisabeth Engberg-Pedersen, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Sonja Erlenkamp, University of Trondheim, Norway
Jean-Michel Fortis, University of Paris 7, France
Craig Hamilton, University of Mulhouse, France
Dylan Glynn, University of Lund, Sweden
Maya Hickmann, University of Paris 5, France
Harriet Jisa, University of Lyon 2, France
Annetta Kopecka, University of Lyon 2, France
Silva Ladewig, University of Frankfort an der Oder, Germany
Jean-Rémi Lapaire, University of Bordeaux 3, France
Aliyah Morgenstern, University of Paris 3, France
Caroline Rossi, University of Lyon 2, France
Stéphane Robert, Fédération TUL - FR 2559, France
Paul Sambre, Lessius Hogeschool, Antwerp, Belgium
Mark Tutton, University de Nantes, France
Kristel van Goethem, University of Louvain, Belgium
Myriam Vermeerbergen, University of Leuven, Belgium
Bencie Woll, University College London, U.K.
Sherman Wilcox, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA

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