Wednesday, November 20, 2024

Fall 2024 lab meetings

 Our lab meetings this quarter will be (generally) Fridays 12:00 - 1:00.

October 11
Grant will do part 1 of a tutorial on "how to do an acceptability experiment", focusing on stimuli creation and counterbalancing.

October 18
Part 2 of "how to do an acceptability experiment", looking at more counterbalancing, pseudo-randomization, and fillers.

October 25
Part 3 of "how to do an acceptability experiment", with the focus this time on using Qualtrics as a platform for running the experiment. 

November 8
For our meeting this week, Hugo will give us a preview of his CAMP poster exploring D-linking in Cantonese.

November 15
No meeting this week. CAMP[7] starts tomorrow!

Thursday, June 6, 2024

Spring 2024 lab meetings

Our meeting times this quarter will be Thursdays 2:00 - 3:30.

April 11
We'll continue our discussion of the Momma & Dillon response that we started looking at last quarter:
Momma, Shota and Dillon, Brian. Discourse Factors Do Not Explain Islands. 

April 18
After our excellent discussion last week, we'll continue our "manner-of-speaking" series with the latest reply from Goldberg, Cuneo and Fergus:
Adele E. Goldberg, Nicole Cuneo, Abigail Fergus. Addressing a challenge to the Backgroundedness account of islands, March 25, 2024. https://osf.io/hmc9n/download/?format=pdf

May 2
This week we'll talk about some current work by Jon Sprouse and Sandra Villata on D-linking and strong/weak islands. The slides from a recent talk of theirs are available here .

May 9
We'll continue our discussion of the Sprouse & Villata slides.

May 16
Since we've been talking about D-linking, we'll continue along those lines with this recent WCCFL poster:
Wh-island effects and d-linking effects in wh-in situ questions
Zheng Shen and Beth Chan, WCCFL 2024

May 23
Grant will show us some work in progress that he has been doing on D-linking.

May 30
We'll discuss this poster on Singapore English that Unsub saw at the recent HSP conference:
Islands for wh-extraction and wh-in-situ are backgrounded in Singlish (but not all backgrounded constructions are islands)
Beth Chan and Zheng Shen

June 6
To finish up the quarter, we'll discuss at least the first part of this recent article:
Christensen, K. R. & Nyvad, A., (2024) “Complexity, frequency, and acceptability”, Glossa: a journal of general linguistics 9(1). doi: https://doi.org/10.16995/glossa.10618


 

Friday, March 15, 2024

Winter 2024 lab meetings

 Our meetings this quarter will be Fridays 12:00 - 1:00.

January 19
We'll start off the quarter by discussing this article on Shupamem:

Schurr H, Kandybowicz J, Nchare AL, Bucknor T, Ma X, Markowska M, Tapia A. Absence of Clausal Islands in Shupamem. Languages. 2024; 9(1):7. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages9010007

January 26
Maho will give us a tutorial on doing Bayesian analyses of the results of acceptability experiments.

February 2
We'll discuss this article:
Huang, N. Finiteness in a language without finite morphology: An experimental study of Mandarin Chinese. Nat Lang Linguist Theory (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11049-023-09591-4

February 9
We'll continue our discussion of the N. Huang article from before, and if there's time, we can start in on this:
Wurmbrand, S. (2024). The Size of Clausal Complements. Annual Review of Linguistics, 10. https://www.annualreviews.org/doi/abs/10.1146/annurev-linguistics-031522-103802

March 1
We'll shift gears this week and start in on this recent article:
Cuneo, N., & Goldberg, A. E. (2023). The discourse functions of grammatical constructions explain an enduring syntactic puzzle. Cognition, 240, 105563.

March 8
Continuation of the Cuneo & Goldberg article!

March 15
For our last meeting of the quarter, we'll discuss this reaction to the Cuneo & Goldberg article:
Momma, Shota and Dillon, Brian, Discourse Factors Do Not Explain Islands.