36.2587, Calls: Speech Patterns and (Dis)fluency Markers: Insights from Spoken Corpora (Romania)
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LINGUIST List: Vol-36-2587. Tue Sep 02 2025. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.
Subject: 36.2587, Calls: Speech Patterns and (Dis)fluency Markers: Insights from Spoken Corpora (Romania)
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================================================================
Date: 01-Sep-2025
From: Monica Vasileanu [monica.vasileanu at litere.unibuc.ro]
Subject: Speech Patterns and (Dis)fluency Markers: Insights from Spoken Corpora
Full Title: Speech Patterns and (Dis)fluency Markers: Insights from
Spoken Corpora
Short Title: SpoCor
Date: 31-Oct-2025 - 31-Oct-2025
Location: Bucharest, Romania
Contact Person: Oana Niculescu
Meeting Email: workshop.spocor at gmail.com
Web Site: https://lingv.ro/2025/04/01/spocor/
Linguistic Field(s): Text/Corpus Linguistics
Call Deadline: 10-Sep-2025
Final Call for Papers:
We are pleased to invite you to the first International Workshop on
Speech Patterns and (Dis)fluency Markers: Insights from Spoken Corpora
(SpoCor) organised at the Romanian Academy Institute of Linguistics in
Bucharest.
Date: October 31, 2025
Venue: Casa Academiei, Calea 13 Septembrie nr. 13, 050711, Bucharest,
Romania
Keynote speakers: Maria Candea (Sorbone Nouvelle), Loulou Kosmala
(Université Paris-Est Créteil)
Convenor: Oana Niculescu (Romanian Academy Institute of Linguistics
“Iorgu Iordan – Alexandru Rosetti”)
Contact: workshop.spocor at gmail.com, oeniculescu at yahoo.com
Conference fee: 200 RON (40 €); 100 RON (20 €) for students or online
participation
Languages: English, French, Romanian
Held within the DIS-Ro research grant
(https://lingv.ro/gar2023-dis-ro-758-23-11-2023/), this workshop
explores the distinctive features of oral discourse through the lens
of spoken corpora. For centuries, linguistics focused on written
language as ‘the norm’, and all features of language were studied
based on written and often constructed artificial examples. Spoken
corpora have enabled a shift in the way we view language, e.g. from a
product-based to a process-based view on grammar (Haselow 2017), from
an inherently-fluent view on communication to stipulating a
fluency-disfluency continuum (Crible 2018), from a verbally-centred
communication to a multimodal construction of meaning (Kosmala 2024).
Data from speech corpora complement experimental findings regarding
language processing and the way in which this differs in first versus
second language acquisition. Moreover, spoken corpora bring valuable
information regarding gender speech patterns (Cheshire 2002, Candea &
Brown 2022), as well as age-based variation (Trimaille & Candea 2021).
Bringing together researchers working on speech data from Romanian and
other languages, we aim to discuss methodological challenges,
linguistic patterns, and discourse phenomena captured in spoken
corpora. We especially welcome cross-linguistic approaches, while also
allowing single-language studies. During the workshop, we aim to
address the following questions:
- What are the distinctive grammatical, lexical, and pragmatic
features of spoken language? How do these features vary across speech
styles (e.g. in monologues vs. dialogues)?
- How does spoken language vary across social, regional, and age
groups?
- What is the role of (dis)fluencies in spontaneous speech?
- How do speech planning and processing differ in native and
non-native language?
- What is the role of gestures in discourse structuring and meaning
construction?
- What are the main challenges in the design, annotation and
exploitation of spoken corpora?
Apart from these questions, we welcome submissions addressing the
following topics:
- Track 1 Variation in speech patterns and sociolinguistics
- Corpus-informed perspectives on spoken grammar
- Functional syntax in interaction: elisions, repetitions and repairs
- Age, gender and regional variation in speech
- Speech tempo and articulation rate across speakers or tasks
- Track 2 Fluency and disfluency in context
- Production and perception of (dis)fluency markers
- Disfluencies as structuring elements in speech
- Language-specific disfluency patterns
- Track 3 Spoken corpora and methodologies
- Corpus design and data collection
- Annotation schema for spoken corpora
- Multimodal corpora and annotation challenges
- Tools and new technologies for spoken corpora
- Track 4 Patterns in non-native speech and (dis)fluencies
- Assessing fluency in non-native speech
- Temporal patterns in native and non-native speech
- Track 5 Multimodality and speech in action
- Gesture, gaze, and body movement in repair and planning
- Temporal alignment across modalities in fluent vs. disfluent speech
- Turn-taking and interactional management of disfluency
- Co-speech gestures and their temporal coordination
Submission Guidelines:
- Presentations will be allocated 20 minutes each, plus 10 minutes
for discussion. The number of submissions is limited to one
single-authored and one co-authored abstract per author (or two
co-authored ones).
- Abstracts no longer than 700 words (excluding references) should be
submitted in PDF format to workshop.spocor at gmail.com.
- Abstracts should clearly state: the title of the papers, 5
key-words, the objectives of the talk, type of data used and the
methodology employed, main findings followed by a brief discussion of
the results. The name and affiliation of the authors should only be
mentioned in the e-mail body.
The workshop will be held in a hybrid format, with both on-site and
online participation options. While we strongly encourage in-person
attendance, online participation can be accommodated in specific
cases. The event offers a platform for sharing resources, tools, and
insights into the analysis of speech in real-life contexts.
A selection of the papers will be published in Revue Roumaine de
Linguistique (WoS indexed).
Important Dates:
Abstract submission deadline: September 10, 2025 (extended deadline)
Notification of acceptance/rejection: September 15, 2025
Author(s) registration deadline: September 26, 2025
SpoCor Workshop: October 31, 2025
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