14.127, Confs: Linguistic Systems and Cognitive Categories
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Tue Jan 14 18:55:34 UTC 2003
LINGUIST List: Vol-14-127. Tue Jan 14 2003. ISSN: 1068-4875.
Subject: 14.127, Confs: Linguistic Systems and Cognitive Categories
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Helen Dry, Eastern Michigan U. <hdry at linguistlist.org>
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Terence Langendoen, U. of Arizona
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1)
Date: Tue, 14 Jan 2003 12:04:55 +0000
From: robert at vjf.cnrs.fr
Subject: Linguistic Systems and Cognitive Categories, France
-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------
Date: Tue, 14 Jan 2003 12:04:55 +0000
From: robert at vjf.cnrs.fr
Subject: Linguistic Systems and Cognitive Categories, France
Space in Languages: Linguistic Systems and Cognitive Categories
Short Title: Space in Languages
Location: Paris, France
Date: 07-FEB-03 - 08-FEB-03
Web Site:
Contact Person: Stéphane Robert
Meeting Email: secretariat.tul at ivry.cnrs.fr
Linguistic Subfield(s):
Cognitive Science, General Linguistics, Psycholinguistics, Typology
Meeting Description:
Space has been often viewed as a universal cognitive primitive, an 'a
priori form of intuition' that conditions all of our
experience. However, various studies show that linguistic and cultural
systems determine - at least partially - the nature and cognitive
accessibility of the information selected by speakers, thereby casting
some doubts on the supposedly universal properties of the category of
space. This evidence then raises questions concerning the impact of
linguistic categorization on perception, as well as the existence of a
single (a-modal) system or of two distinct (linguistic vs. perceptual
and motor) systems of spatial representations. First, how is space
encoded across languages and to what extent does space, as it is
linguistically encoded, reflect forms of perceptual experience and
which aspects of this experience do languages encode? Does space
constitute a pure and primitive category from which other linguistic
meanings are then derived ?
The study of space can then be reframed in terms of several
fundamental questions, that will be addressed during this conference
from the point of view of linguistics (typology, diachrony,
sign-language), cognitive anthropology, the philosophy of language,
psycholinguistics, and neurosciences.
Space in languages: linguistic systems and cognitive categories
7-8 février 2003 / 7-8 February 2003
Ecole Normale Supérieure (salle Dussane)
45 rue dUlm, 75005 Paris
International conference organized by the research group on Language
diversity and change : cognitive implications (GDR 1955)
Financed by the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS)
http://llacan.cnrs-bellevue.fr/Pages/SpaceLang.htm
Contact : secretariat.tul at ivry.cnrs.fr
FREE ENTRY - NO REGISTRATION
************************************
PROGRAMME / PROGRAM
************************************
Friday 7 February
9h15-9h30 Opening
9h30-10h10 Colette Grinevald
(Laboratoire Dynamique du Langage, Université de Lyon 2)
The expression of static location in a typological perspective.
10h10-10h50 Denis Creissels
(Laboratoire Dynamique du Langage, Université de Lyon 2)
Encoding the distinction between localization, the source of motion,
and the direction of motion: a typological study.
10h50-11h20 Pause
11h20-12h00 Alain Peyraube
(Centre de Recherche sur les Langues d'Asie Orientale, EHESS Paris)
On the history of place words and localizers in Chinese: a cognitive approach.
12h00-12h40 Marie-Anne Sallandre
(UFR Sciences du Langage, Université de Paris 8)
Iconicity in discourse: the role of space in French sign language.
12h40-14h30 Lunch
14h30-15h10 Chris Sinha
(Department of Psychology, University of Portsmouth)
Mapping and construal in spatial language and conceptualization:
language variation and acquisition.
15h10-15h50 Melissa Bowerman
(Max-Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen)
Constructing language-specific spatial categories in first language
acquisition.
15h50-16h20 Pause
16h20-17h00 Barbara Landau
(Department of Cognitive Science, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore)
(De)Coupling of spatial language and spatial cognition.
17h00-17h40 Michel Denis
(LIMSI, Orsay)
Deficits in spatial discourse: the case of Alzheimer patients.
Saturday 8 February
9h30-10h10 Anetta Kopecka
(Laboratoire Dynamique du Langage, Université de Lyon 2)
The semantic structure of motion verbs in French: typological perspectives.
10h10-10h50 Maya Hickmann
(Laboratoire Cognition et Développement, Université de Paris 5)
The relativity of motion in first language acquisition.
10h50-11h20 Pause
11h20-12h00 Dan Slobin
(Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley)
What makes manner of motion salient?
12h00-12h40 Jérôme Dokic & Elisabeth Pacherie
(Institut Jean Nicod, EHESS Paris)
Molyneux's question and frames of reference.
12h40-14h30 Lunch
14h30-15h10 Pierre Cadiot & Franck Lebas
(Université de Paris 8, Laboratoire LATTICE & Université Clermont-Ferrand 2)
The French movement verb MONTER as a challenge to the status of
spatial reference.
15h10-15h50 Yves-Marie Visetti
(Laboratoire LATTICE, ENS Paris)
Semantics and its models of perception and action.
15h50-16h30 Claude Vandeloise
(State University of Louisiana, Bâton Rouge)
Are there spatial prepositions?
16h30-17h00 Pause
17h00-18h00 Table Ronde / Open discussion
chaired by
Stéphane Robert (LLACAN, INALCO Paris)
________________________________________
A final announcement containing the abstracts will be made by the end
of January. Abstracts will be available on the conference web page :
http://llacan.cnrs-bellevue.fr/Pages/SpaceLang.htm
INFORMATIONS PRATIQUES / PRACTICAL INFORMATIONS
The place
The Ecole Normale Supérieure is located in downtown Paris in the
Quartier Latin (5th area, close to the Pantheon). RER Station:
Luxembourg; Buslines : 21, 27, 38, 85. For further details, see the
ENS web page : http://ulm.ens.fr/
Accomodation
You can find a list of hotels, including students hotels, on the web
site of the Office de tourisme et des congrès de Paris:
http://www.paris-touristoffice.com/
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