[Corpora-List] CfP Corpus Methods in Cognitive Linguistics - Theme Session (ICLC-13)
Dylan Glynn
dylan.glynn at univ-paris8.fr
Tue Sep 2 13:34:47 UTC 2014
Call for Papers - Corpus Methods in Cognitive Linguistics
Theme Session at the 13th International Cognitive Linguistics Conference
(ICLC-13
(apologies for crossposting)
This is a call for submissions for a theme session at the International
Conference of Cognitive Linguistics (ICLC-13, 20-25 July 2015,
Newcastle, UK).
Building on the tradition developed by Dirven et al. (1982), Schmid
(1993), Geeraerts et al. (1994) and Gries (2003), the theme session will
focus on usage-based approaches in Cognitive Linguistics.
More specifically, the session has two aims:
1. Develop corpus methods for attaining descriptive adequacy.
2. Develop corpus methods for attaining explanatory adequacy.
1. Description and social variation
Given the theoretical assumptions of the Cognitive Linguistics model of
language, sociolinguistic variation is integral to structure.
Therefore, accounting for this complexity in language description is
necessary for descriptive accuracy.
This aim continues the line of research represented in Dirven &
Kristiansen (2008), Geeraerts et al. (2010), Pütz et al. (2012), and
Reif et al. (2013).
2. Explanation and hypothesis testing
Proposals such as (but not restricted to) prototype effects in
categorisation, force dynamics in causation, metaphor and metonymy in
conceptualisation, frame semantic structuring of argument structure or
grounding in construal are central to the paradigm of Cognitive
Linguistics.
These theories and those like them seek to explain how language
production is possible. Examples of recent contributions in this line of
research include Gries & Stefanowitsch (2006), Stefanowitsch & Gries
(2006), Glynn & Fischer (2010), Glynn & Robinson (2014).
Although these two aims, description and explanation, are inherently
related, the theme session hopes to highlight specifically their place
in the development of corpus methodology.
Studies employing corpora / natural language production that seek to
develop the field, in either or both these ways, are invited for
submission.
*Submission Guidelines*
Abstracts not strictly adhering to submission guidelines will not be
considered.
*Abstracts*
Abstracts should be clearly structured:
question / problem
answer / solution
data / method
conclusions / results (expected)
*Formatting*
Abstracts should be formatted following the guidelines set by the
conference:
length: 1 A4 page (including title, name, affiliation, data, figures,
references)
typeface: 10 point Arial, single-spaced
margins: 2.5 cm
format: files should be prepared in .doc, .docx, or .odt
file: title of the file should be: CMCL_AUTHOR_NAME
*Session Submission*
Date: 20 October 2014
Address: dglynn at univ-paris8.fr
Email subject: CMCL Theme session
*Conference Submission*
After acceptance to the theme session, the abstracts must be reviewed
again, following the process for abstract reviewing for general session
papers. This second stage will be anonymous, organised by the conference
and will involve uploading the abstract to the conference site. This
must be done by the 3rd November.
The link to the conference site with further information is:
https://www.northumbria.ac.uk/about-us/news-events/events/2015/07/iclc-13-the-13th-international-cognitive-linguistics-conference/
*Organisers*
Dylan Glynn, University of Paris VIII
Nele Põldvere, Lund University
Jaroslaw Jozefowski, University of Sheffield
Karolina Krawczak, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan'
*Website*
http://www.dsglynn.univ-paris8.fr/cmcl_iclc.html
*References*
Dirven, R., Goossens, L., Putseys, Y., & Vorlat, E. (1982). The scene of
linguistic action and its perspectivization by speak, talk, say, and
tell. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Geeraerts, D., Grondelaers, S., & Bakema, P. (1994). The structure of
lexical variation. Meaning, naming, and context. Berlin & New York:
Mouton de Gruyter.
Geeraerts, D., Kristiansen, G., & Piersman, Y. (Eds.). (2010). Advances
in Cognitive Sociolinguistics. Berlin & New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
Glynn, D. & Robinson, J. (Eds.). (2014). Corpus Methods for Semantics
Quantitative studies in polysemy and synonymy. Amsterdam & Philadelphia:
John Benjamins.
Glynn, D., & Fischer, K. (Eds.) (2010). Quantitative Cognitive
Semantics: Corpus-driven approaches. Berlin & New York: Mouton de Gruyter
Gries, St. Th. (2003). Multifactorial analysis in corpus linguistics: A
study of particle placement. London & New York: Continuum Press.
Gries, St. Th., & Stefanowitsch, A. (Eds.). (2006). Corpora in Cognitive
Linguistics: Corpus-based approaches to syntax and lexis. Berlin & New
York: Mouton de Gruyter.
Kristiansen, G., & Dirven, R. (Eds.). (2008). Cognitive
Sociolinguistics: Language variation, cultural models, social systems.
Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Pütz, M., Robinson, J. A., & Reif, M. (Eds.). (2012a). Cognitive
Sociolinguistics: Variation in cognition and language use. Special issue
of Review of Cognitive Linguistics, 10(2).
Reif, M., Robinson, J. A., & Pütz, M. (Eds.). (2013). Variation in
language and language use: Sociolinguistic, socio-cultural and cognitive
perspectives. Frankfurt/Main: Peter Lang.
Schmid, H.-J. (1993). Cottage and co., idea, start vs. begin. Die
Kategorisierung als Grundprinzip einer differenzierten
Bedeutungsbeschreibung. Tübingen: Max Niemeyer.
Stefanowitsch, A., & Gries, St. Th. (Eds.). (2006). Corpus-based
approaches to metaphor and metonymy. Berlin & New York: Mouton de Gruyter.
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