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Language Science Center

Although we will continue to offer a Zoom option for LSLT for now, we strongly encourage you to attend in person! The talk is only part of the point of LSLT: it's a good opportunity to meet and chat with students and faculty in other departments. This week we're reinstating the classic LSLT sandwich line (with a few improvements to keep things more sanitary).

Zoom link: https://go.umd.edu/lslt-zoom

Do we speak better than we understand?

 

Applications for the Undergraduate Research Fellowship are closed. Stay tuned for more information on new undergraduate opportunities.

The Undergraduate Research Fellowship is intended to make research experiences more accessible to students who need them to pursue their academic or career goals.

Although we will continue to offer a Zoom option for LSLT for now, we strongly encourage you to attend in person! The talk is only part of the point of LSLT: it's a good opportunity to meet and chat with students and faculty in other departments. This week we'll have coffee and dessert to make it worth the walk across campus!

Zoom link: https://go.umd.edu/lslt-zoom

Analysis of Human Utterances using Natural Language Processing Approaches

 

RSVP by January 4!

Schedule and session details are available on the Winter Storm 2022 webpage.

 

Prediction during language processing: Beyond activation

Abstract: Prediction during language processing has been extensively studied over the past decades, however, the specific mechanisms involved are under ongoing debate. In this talk I will focus on a suggested distinction between two qualitatively distinct prediction processes, pre-activation and pre-updating, presenting experiments aimed to examine key aspects of these processes.

 

 

How a dialect-shifting curriculum shapes K-1 teachers’ attitudes toward language variation: A mixed-methods study

 

Identifying a code-switch: exploring methods for studying the use of prosodic and phonetic cues

 

Island effects and their absence with multiple questions in Bulgarian

Abstract: Grammars exhibit island effects. That is to say, the linguistic knowledge a speaker has prevents them from forming questions in certain environments. For example, the string "Who did you meet the professor that taught?" cannot be used to ask who is the person such that you met the professor who taught that person. In this talk, I report experimental evidence concerning the possible obviation of island effects in Bulgarian with multiple questions.

 

Bilingual Code-switching: Exploring Variation in Comprehension Costs

Abstract: Bilinguals experience costs during comprehension when there is a switch between languages—taking longer to process a “code-switch” than single-language input. However, the magnitude of these comprehension costs varies. In this talk, I present data from a study that attempts to explain variation in code-switch comprehension costs.

Charlotte will be presenting remotely, but we will have an in-person audience at the Language Science Center in addition to Zoom.

 

Listener knowledge about sociolinguistic variation

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