26.750, Calls: Pragmatics/Germany
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LINGUIST List: Vol-26-750. Wed Feb 04 2015. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.
Subject: 26.750, Calls: Pragmatics/Germany
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Date: Wed, 04 Feb 2015 19:02:33
From: Nicole Gotzner [gotzner at zas.gwz-berlin.de]
Subject: Formal and Experimental Pragmatics: Methodological Issues of a Nacsent Liaison
Full Title: Formal and Experimental Pragmatics: Methodological Issues of a Nacsent Liaison
Short Title: MXPRAG 2015
Date: 01-Jun-2015 - 03-Jun-2015
Location: Berlin, Germany
Contact Person: Nicole Gotzner
Meeting Email: gotzner at zas.gwz-berlin.de
Linguistic Field(s): Pragmatics
Call Deadline: 01-Mar-2015
Meeting Description:
Formal and experimental pragmatics: methodological issues of a nacsent liaison
(MXPRAG 2015)
Berlin, Germany
Centre for General Linguistics (ZAS)
Date: 1-3 June 2015
Aims:
The idea of the workshop is to provide a forum for the discussion of methodological questions and related theoretical issues that arise for researchers working at the interface between formal pragmatic theory and experimental data.
After decades of defying broad-coverage formalization, recent years have seen a surge of precise and testable pragmatic theories, which have substantially advanced our understanding of various types of pragmatic inferences, including scalar implicatures, ad hoc Quantity implicatures, M-implicatures, and ignorance implicatures, to name just a few. At least two kinds of approaches can be distinguished according to the level of abstraction at which they operate. Structural approaches are high-level descriptions of pragmatic phenomena in terms of general and abstract constraints, principles or rules. These constraints, principles or rules are often, but not always, motivated by ideas about optimal conversation (think: Gricean Maxims and its offspring) and often target the interpretation of sentences in a default context. On the other hand, interactional approaches try to explain pragmatic phenomena by explicitly representing relevant contextual factors, distinguishing speaker and listener perspectives and interlocutors' possibly divergent, partial or approximate beliefs about the aforementioned. Structural and interactional approaches should not be perceived as being in opposition, but rather as synergetic, with insights from either positively stimulating the respective other. In this spirit, this workshop is about general methodological problems of connecting formal pragmatics to empirical data, especially data from psycholinguistic experiments. The problem is brought to the surface clearly by interactional approaches, but affects structural approaches too. A prerequisite for these models to work are formally explicit assumptions regarding speaker and listener beliefs about various contextual factors, including, e.g., action alternatives, interlocutor preferences, degree of interlocutor cooperativity, or differential interlocutor knowledge. Therefore, it is vital that empirically driven pragmatic modeling be explicit about how these contextually relevant factors are mapped from the experimental setup onto the formal pragmatic theory.
Invited Speakers:
Mike Tanenhaus (University of Rochester)
Hannah Rohde (University of Edinburgh)
Organizers: Anton Benz, Judith Degen, Michael Franke, Nicole Gotzner, Gerhard Jäger and Anthea Schöller
https://sites.google.com/site/mxprag2015/
Funded by the DFG XPrag.de Initiative
2nd Call for Papers:
Formal and Experimental Pragmatics: Methodological Issues of a Nacsent Liaison
Submission deadline: 1 March 2015
Aims:
The workshop will provide a forum for the discussion of methodological questions and related theoretical issues that arise for researchers working at the interface between formal pragmatic theory and experimental data.
Authors are invited to submit an extended abstract relevant to the workshop's topics. Submissions should be anonymous, in PDF format and not exceed 2 pages with standard formatting, including all references, figures, tables etc.
Please upload your submission to https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=mxprag2015 by 1 March 2015.
Relevant topics include, but are not limited to, the following:
- Modeling of context-dependence and the subsequent challenges of controlling context in experimental designs
- Linking functions between model predictions and experimental data from different measures, including meta-linguistic judgments, sentence verification, response times, reading times, eye movements, sentence completion and other production measures
- The role of cognitive resource limitations in computational models
- The connection between computational models of pragmatics and online pragmatic processing
Important Dates:
Submission Deadline: 1 March 2015
Notification of acceptance: 1 April 201
Conference date: 1-3 June 2015
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