查看原文
其他

心理语言学线上论坛(9月22-10月20)

分享 语言科学 2022-04-24
讲座一
Speaker: Nick Huang
Title: Probing the limits of linguistic experience in our theories of language 
Time: 15:00 – 16:30 pm, 22 Sep 2021 
           (Beijing, Hong Kong time)
Venue: https://cuhk.zoom.us/j/779556638
            https://cuhk.zoom.cn/j/779556638



About the speaker 
Nick Huang is an assistant professor at the Department of English Language and Literature at the National University of Singapore. He graduated from the University of Maryland with a PhD in linguistics and was a visiting postdoctoral researcher at the University of Connecticut. His main research interests are in cross-linguistic variation in language processing and grammars and how linguistic experience and cognitive biases might contribute to explain such variability. Ongoing projects of his include wh-dependencies, attitude verbs and clause structure, and the morphosyntax of Singapore English.

Probing the limits of linguistic experience in our theories of language

Nick Huang
Department of English Language and Literature, National University of Singapore

How does our experience with language shape how we learn and process it? Recent research into this classic question, especially within computational psycholinguistics and natural language processing, suggests that many behavioural and grammatical distinctions can be reasonably captured using just the statistics of easily-observed linguistic features in one’s linguistic experience.

Despite these empirical successes, I argue that a more nuanced view of the role of linguistic experience is still necessary. As support, I will discuss three case studies from different domains of psycholinguistics. The first two case studies draw from adult sentence processing, looking at cross-linguistic variability in double centre-embedding illusions (e.g. the relative acceptability of the ungrammatical The patient who the nurse who the clinic had hired called) and variability in the acceptability of English long-distance wh-questions (e.g. What did Jo think/??shout that Sam saw?). The third case study concerns how children might learn the meaning of abstract mental state verbs like think and want in English and Mandarin Chinese. I argue that “linguistic statistics” approaches, which have been proposed for these case studies, do not provide a satisfactory explanation for the data. I present evidence from experiments, computational models, and corpora to suggest that these case studies can be better accounted for by appealing to e.g. a cue-based retrieval parsing model or learning biases that involve substantial abstraction over one’s linguistic experience.

Virtual Psycholinguistics Forum: 
(https://cuhklpl.github.io/forum.html)


讲座二
Speaker: Yaling Hsiao
Title: The language that children hear and read: Implications for language and literacy development
Time: 16:00 – 17:30 pm, 6 October 2021 
           (Beijing, Hong Kong time)
Venue: https://cuhk.zoom.us/j/779556638
            https://cuhk.zoom.cn/j/779556638



About the speaker 
I am interested in how children learn to read and how humans comprehend and produce language. Broadly speaking, my research focuses on answering the question of "what makes some words and grammatical structures easier to learn and process than others?" We experience words and grammar in our daily language use and exposure to text and speech. Words and sentences appear at different frequency and in different contexts and genres. I study how experience gained through reading and speech shapes how we learn and process words and grammar. I use a combination of corpus analysis, behavioural methods and computational modelling to answer this question. 

I am currently a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow at Department of Experimental Psychology and a Junior Research Fellow at Wolfson College in University of Oxford. I completed my Ph.D. in Psychology at University of Wisconsin-Madison. 


The language that children hear and read: Implications for language and literacy development 

Yaling Hsiao 
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford

The abilities to produce sophisticated words and complex sentences are hallmarks of language development.  Language and literacy outcome is highly associated with language experience, in particular print exposure. Children’s books may provide a unique source for rich and complex language that children cannot otherwise encounter in everyday life. To understand how print exposure supports children’s language and literacy development, we identified linguistic features at the lexical, morphological and syntactic levels and compared the differences in corpora of children’s books and child-directed speech. We found that children’s books, including those targeted at pre-literate children for the purpose of shared reading and those written for children who can independently read, were lexically denser and more diverse, contained more abstract and later acquired words, as well as being more morphologically and syntactically complex than everyday speech that children hear. Written language provides unique linguistic input even in the pre-school years, well before children can read for themselves. 

Virtual Psycholinguistics Forum: 
(https://cuhklpl.github.io/forum.html)


讲座三
Speaker: Francesca M. Branzi
Title: Contextual Influences on Multilingual Lexical Access
Time: 16:00 – 17:30, 20 October 2021 
           (Beijing, Hong Kong time)
Venue: https://cuhk.zoom.us/j/779556638
            https://cuhk.zoom.cn/j/779556638



About the speaker 
Dr. Branzi is a neuroscientist interested in the neural basis of language and semantic processing in monolingual and multilingual speakers. She completed her PhD on the cognitive and neural correlates of language production and executive functions in multilinguals, under the supervision of Prof. Albert Costa (Pompeu Fabra University, Barcelona). In 2015 she was a postdoctoral scientist at the Basque Center for Cognition, Brain and Language (San Sebastian, Spain). After being awarded a Marie Curie Fellowship in 2016, she joined the University of Manchester and then the MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit (University of Cambridge) to work with Prof. Matthew Lambon Ralph. She is now a lecturer at University of Liverpool, UK.

Her recent research focuses more on the neural basis of semantic cognition in naturalistic settings by using a variety of research tools including fMRI, EEG and TMS.

Contextual Influences on Multilingual Lexical Access


Francesca M. Branzi, PhD
Department of Psychological Sciences, Institute of Population Health, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK

For multilingual speakers, language production requires managing competition between lexical representations in the two languages. Still, the extent to which this competition is modulated by contextual factors, such as the linguistic context (bilingual versus monolingual) and/or the type of attentional mechanisms (top down versus bottom up), is relatively unknown. During this talk, I will present fMRI and behavioural evidence showing how multilingual lexical access and cross-language competition are affected by different contextual factors. Then, I will discuss the implications of these findings for the psycholinguistic models of language production.


Virtual Psycholinguistics Forum: 
(https://cuhklpl.github.io/forum.html)

原文来源:港中文语言处理实验室

1.相关阅读
跨语言视角下的汉语假设句研究
认知语言学的研究方法
具身语言的理论基础
语言文学研究成果速递
语言类型学视域下的领属范畴研究
非习语程式语与学术写作语言产出研究
起始年龄和语言学能与二语学习成效的关系研究
李心释:当代诗歌语言问题探赜

2.公益讲座

香港中文大学中国语言及文学系学术讲座系列
跨学科时代语言研究的理论与方法系列讲座(9月8-24日)
中国人民大学文学院系列讲座
北京语言大学外国语学部系列讲座(9月6-24)
心理语言学论坛||Nick Huang教授/M. Branzi 博士
数字人文方法论系列讲座
9月15-22日语言文学讲座/会议/论坛(第67期)


3.论坛/会议
高校外语专业硕博研究生学术论坛
第八届当代语言学理论及国际汉语教育研究生学术论坛
“2021语言智能教学国际会议”
第六届全国生态语言学研讨会
四川省语言学会第二十一届学术年会通知
跨文化与跨学科——语言、文学、新闻传播论坛
北外外国语言文学学科研究生论坛
第一届语言健康研讨会
首届语言智能研究高层论坛
南开大学外国语学院第一届研究生学术论坛
第五届“语言学博士论坛”
第17届功能语言学学术研讨会

4.方法工具
(1)互动赠书||带你玩转翻译技术
(2)王华树博士团队带你走进人工智能时代的翻译技术
(3)雷蕾教授《基于Python的语料库数据处理》重磅上市
(4)国内常用语料库集锦
(5)免费下载英文电子书网站集锦
(6)普林斯顿大学教授的暑假书单
(7)华东师大外院推荐专业读物

您可能也对以下帖子感兴趣

文章有问题?点此查看未经处理的缓存