36.2438, Calls: Sign Language Grammars, Parsing Models, & the Brain (Interdisciplinary Workshop) (Germany)

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LINGUIST List: Vol-36-2438. Mon Aug 18 2025. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 36.2438, Calls: Sign Language Grammars, Parsing Models, & the Brain (Interdisciplinary Workshop) (Germany)

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Date: 15-Aug-2025
From: Patrick C. Trettenbrein [patrick.trettenbrein at uni-goettingen.de]
Subject: Sign Language Grammars, Parsing Models, & the Brain (Interdisciplinary Workshop)


Full Title: Sign Language Grammars, Parsing Models, & the Brain
(Interdisciplinary Workshop)

Date: 06-Nov-2025 - 07-Nov-2025
Location: Leipzig, Germany
Contact Person: Patrick C. Trettenbrein
Meeting Email: trettenbrein at cbs.mpg.de
Web Site: https://sign-language-grammars-parsers-brain.github.io

Linguistic Field(s): Applied Linguistics; Cognitive Science;
Linguistic Theories; Neurolinguistics; Psycholinguistics
Language Family(ies): African Deaf Sign Languages; Asian Deaf Sign
Languages; European Deaf Sign Languages; North American Deaf Sign
Languages; South American Deaf Sign Languages

Call Deadline: 15-Sep-2025

2nd Call for Papers
Extended Deadline: 15 September 2025
Call for Papers in International Sign (IS): https://s.gwdg.de/ZZsMdS
(Note: Link opens MP4 video file.)
Background:
The world’s different sign languages offer a unique perspective on the
human capacity for language and their rigorous scientific study within
linguistics since the 60s of the past century has provided a multitude
of novel insights. Some of these have significantly and lastingly
changed how we conceptualize and investigate our species’ faculty of
language: We now understand language as a seemingly universal and
modality-independent capacity.
Just like in research on spoken language, the relationship between
theoretical descriptions of different phenomena in sign languages and
how they may apply or relate to phenomena usually studied by
psychologists and neuroscientists is not straightforward. However, we
nevertheless believe that any serious experimental investigation of
(sign) language should be grounded in a well-motivated theoretical
framework provided by linguistics as the scientific study of grammar.
Goal:
The goal of this workshop is to bring together sign language
researchers of different theoretical persuasions with practitioners in
psycho- and neurolinguistics of sign language to jointly determine:
 - To what extent are current theoretical approaches themselves
accurate or need to be expanded to capture phenomena of the
visuo-spatial modality of sign languages?
 - How do different formal descriptions and theoretical approaches
relate and are relevant to psycho- and neurolinguistic studies of sign
language processing and language processing in general?
 - In this context, we also explicitly invite contributions dealing
with similar issues in research on spoken language that adopt a
multimodal perspective on speech or integrate speech and gesture.
Key Questions:
Topics that are of particular interest for discussion at the workshop
are:
 - What impact has research on the grammar (in a broad sense) of sign
languages had on how we look at and study spoken languages and
conceptualise the human language capacity and its neurocognitive
basis?
 - How can seemingly modality-specific phenomena of sign languages
(e.g., the impact of iconicity) be accounted for theoretically and
what is the impact of such “enlarged” theoretical accounts on the
psycho- and neurolinguistics of sign language (e.g., algorithmic
accounts aiming to create parsing models that account for sign
language processing)?
 - How can non-manual components of sign languages best be accounted
for and integrated in theories of grammar, what is their linguistic
and neurocognitive status, and how can we integrate them in theories
of (sign) language processing?
 - What, if anything, can psycho- and neurolinguistic studies on sign
languages feed back into our theoretical understanding of grammar (of
sign languages, but also language in general)?
Invited Presenters:
To get the discussion going our workshop will feature invited
presentations by leading researchers in the study of sign language
grammars, parsing models, and the neural basis of sign language
processing. The invited presenters will also participate in the
scheduled round-table session as discussants.
The following Invited Presenters have confirmed their participation:
 - Carlo Cecchetto: "The Challenge of Simultaneity for Formal Accounts
of Sign Language Grammars"
 - David Corina: "Neurobiological Perspectives on Sign Production:
Implications for Predictive Models of Sign Language Processing"
 - Karen Emmorey: "From Perception to Phonology: Neural Tuning for
Visual-Manual Phonological Structure"
 - Vadim Kimmelman: "Can Computer Vision Provide Insight Into the
Nature of Nonmanual Markers in Sign Languages?"
 - Rachel I. Mayberry: "Childhood Language Shapes the Adult
Brain-Language System: Insights from American Sign Language"
 - Marloes Oomen: "Do Signers Interpret R-Loci as Regions or Points?
Insights From an Online Probe Recognition Task"
Call for Papers:
Call for papers submission portal:
https://sign-language-grammars-parsers-brain.github.io/call-for-papers/#abstract-submission
Besides the contributions by our invited speakers, we invite
contributions from the scientific community for which we have
generously allocated time slots in the preliminary Workshop Programme.
Accordingly, we currently have an open Call for Papers and are looking
forward to receiving your submissions.
The workshop will feature a select number of on-stage presentations,
but will also include a poster session. Notice that we particularly
encourage submissions from junior researchers (advanced master’s or
PhD students, as well as early post-docs).
Visit the official Call for Papers page to learn more about the
requirements and deadlines for abstract submission:
https://sign-language-grammars-parsers-brain.github.io/call-for-papers/
Extended Deadline: 15 September 2025



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