[행사/세미나] 2021 Fall/Winter LSK Young Scholar Symposium (Online)
- 영어영문학과
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- 2021-07-23
2021 Fall/Winter LSK Young Scholar Symposium (Online)
안녕하세요. 한국언어학회입니다.
한국언어학회에서는 10월 21일-22일과 12월 9일-10일 두 번에 걸쳐 신진연구자(석박사 과정 및 학위자 및 포닥과정, 학위 수여 이후 3년 이내 비전임학자)들을 위한 심포지엄 개최를 계획하고 있습니다. 본 심포지엄은 세계적인 저명학자들의 초청강연과 신진학자들의 구두 발표 및 이에 대한 석학들의 피드백, 참여자들과의 Q&A로 구성될 계획입니다.
초청연사 발표제목 및 담당 세션 분야:
Raúl Aranovich (University of California Davis): 통사론, 의미론, 전산언어학
Rui P. Chaves (University at Buffalo): 통사론, 딥러닝
Mark Davies (Brigham Young University): 코퍼스언어학, 역사언어학, 언어 변이
Stefen Engelberg (Leibniz-Institut für Deutsche Sprache Mannheim): 어휘론, 의미론, 은유
Adele Goldberg (Princeton University): 인지언어학, 언어처리
Stefan Th. Gries (University of California, Santa Barbara): 코퍼스언어학
Martin Hilpert (Université de Neuchâtel): 인지언어학, 구문 문법, 언어 변이
Sun Ah Jun (University of California, Los Angeles): 음성학, 음운론
Manfred Krifka (Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft & Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin): 의미론, 화용론
Javier Pérez-Guerra (Universida de Vigo): 통사론, 코퍼스언어학, 언어 변이
위의 명시된 통사론, 의미/화용론, 음음론/음성학, 언어처리, 코퍼스언어학, 언어습득, 인지언어학, 전산언어학 분야 와 언어학 관련 연구논문을 발표할 논문 초록을 아래와 같이 모집합니다.
- 신진연구자: 제1 발표자는 석, 박사 과정생 및 학위자, 포닥, 공동연구자는 교강사 등 가능
- 발표: 20분 발표 & 10분 피드백 및 Q&A
- 초록: 참고문헌 및 예문 등 모두 포함한 A4 용지 2매 이내 (pdf파일로 제출)
- 초록 제출: 2021youngscholarLSK@gmail.com
- 발표시기: 10월 혹은 12월 중 선호도 순서 표시
- 발표 세션 명시: 통사론, 의미/화용론, 음운론, 음성학, 어휘, 코퍼스언어학, 인지언어학, 구문문법, 전산언어학/딥러닝, 언어변이, 세계 영어 중 가장 연관된 분야 선호도 1,2 선택
- 발표결정 공지: 9월 17일 (금)
- 발표자료 제출: 각 심포지엄 진행 1주일 전(구체적인 일정 추후 공지)
[주요일정]
- 초록 제출 기한: 2021년9월 3일 (토)
- 심사결과 공지: 2021년 9월 27일 (월)
- Workshop: 10 월 21일-22일 & 12월 9일-10일
- 발표자료(pdf slides) 제출: 10월 17일, 12월 5일
초청연사 강연 소개
- Raúl Aranovich (University of California Davis)
Talk Title: How to catch a cyber-criminal with words: Linguistics, Cybersecurity, and the Semantic web
Raúl Aranovich is a theoretical linguist working on the interfaces between syntax, morphology, and semantics. His research focuses on grammatical mismatches between these levels. Professor Aranovich specializes in the grammars of Spanish and other romance languages, but also Fijian and Shona. He employs empirical methods using natural language processing and corpus linguistics tools, which recently have led him to work on computer-mediated communication. A current interdisciplinary project, funded by NSF, explores the role of ontologies in enhancing semantic searches for cybersecurity information.
- Rui P. Chaves (University at Buffalo)
Talk Title: Just what do you think you’re doing, BERT?
Rui P. Chaves is Associate Professor of Linguistics at the University at Buffalo, the State University of New York. His work focuses on how linguistic knowledge interfaces with cognition, and in particular with probabilistic information that shapes linguistic behavior. He has specialized in formally explicit construction-based models of grammar.
- Mark Davies (Brigham Young University)
Talk Title: Examining (historical, dialectal, and genre-based) variation in syntax with large, online corpora
Mark Davies is a Professor Emeritus of Linguistics at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, USA. He has published widely on language variation and change, and he has received several large grants to create and analyze corpora. He is the creator of several large corpora and corpus-based tools that are available from English-Corpora.org, which are used by hundreds of thousands of researchers and teachers each month.
- Stefan Engelberg (Leibniz-Institut für Deutsche Sprache Mannheim)
Talk Title: Metaphors: Morphosyntax and pattern building
Stefan Engelberg is head of the “Department of Lexical Studies” and vice director of the “Leibniz Institute of the German Language”. He studied general linguistics, German and Slavic philology at the universities of Frankfurt and Münster (MA thesis on morphology in HPSG, 1990) and did his PhD on “Verbs, Events, and the Lexicon” (1998) and his habilitation on “Lexical and structural aspects of the constitution of sentence meaning” (2005) at the University of Wuppertal.
- Adele Goldberg (Princeton University)
Talk Title: Explain me this: Language generalizes in creative but constrained ways
Adele Goldberg has been a professor at Princeton University since 2004, initially in the linguistics program and currently in the psychology department. Her work focuses on the role of semantic, social, statistical, and memory-based factors in how languages are learned, represented, and used. She aims to gain a better understanding of human’s creative but constrained language ability in adults and children, L1 and L2, neurotypical and atypical populations. She is fascinated by many aspects of language including: word meaning, language change, island constraints, metaphor processing and emotion, good-enough language production, and the various functions of grammatical constructions
- Stefan Th. Gries (University of California, Santa Barbara)
Talk Title: Statistical analyses of learner corpus data: Pitfalls and recommendations
Stefan Th. Gries is (full) professor of linguistics in the Department of Linguistics at the UC, Santa Barbara and Chair of English Linguistics (Corpus Linguistics with a focus on quantitative methods, 25%) at the Justus-Liebig-Universität Giessen. Gries is a quantitative corpus linguist at the intersection of corpus linguistics, cognitive linguistics, and computational linguistics, who uses a variety of different statistical methods to investigate linguistic topics such as syntax, semantics, and corpus-linguistic methodology, as well as first and second/foreign language acquisition.
- Martin Hilpert (Université de Neuchâtel)
Talk Title: Constructional change and distributional semantics
Martin Hilpert is Professor of English Linguistics at the University of Neuchâtel. He holds a PhD from Rice University. He did postdoctoral research at the International Computer Science Institute in Berkeley and at the Freiburg Institute for Advanced Studies. He is interested in cognitive linguistics, language change, construction grammar, and corpus linguistics.
- Sun-Ah Jun (University of California, Los Angeles)
Talk Title: Typology of word prominence and intonation
Sun-Ah Jun is Professor at UCLA, Department of Linguistics (Ph.D at Ohio State University, 1993). She has also taught at the Linguistic Society of America (LSA) Summer Institution in 2001 and 2015, and at the Netherlands Graduate School of Linguistics (LOT) Summer School in 2013. Her research interests include intonational phonology, prosodic typology, the interface between prosody and various subareas of linguistics, and language acquisition.
- Manfred Krifka (Leibniz-Zentrum Allgemeine Sprachwissenschaft & Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)
Talk Title: The layers of assertion: Propositions, Judgements, Commitments, Acts
Manfred Krifka received his PhD in Munich, Germany, with a dissertation on aspectual classes and the mass/count distinction. He was professor at the University of Texas at Austin and is currently at Humboldt-University Berlin and director of the Leibniz-Centre General Linguistics. He has contributed to the topics of information structure, questions, vagueness, negation, and anaphora. Currently, he is working on languages in Vanuatu and on speech acts as PI of an ERC Advanced Grant, Speech Acts in Grammar and Discourse.
- Javier Pérez-Guerra (Universida de Vigo)
Talk Title: Fragments in Present-day English: When clauses don’t count
Javier Pérez-Guerra is Professor of English Linguistics at the University of Vigo, where he coordinates the LVTC (Language Variation and Textual Categorisation) research group. He has been the Principal Investigator of a number of competitive research projects on topics such as information packaging in the clause, multidimensional approaches to register variation, the study of grammatical variation between Modern and Present-day English from corpus-based empirical perspectives, and the impact of performance preferences and ease of processing on the design of grammars.
주최: 한국언어학회
주관: 경희대학교 언어정보연구소