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Pablos_LUND_Final_Handout.ppt

Pablos_LUND_Final_Handout.ppt The role of agreement in NPI licensing Leticia Pablos School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences University of Reading, UK Brain Talk, Lunds Universitet 3rd June, 2008 Leticia Pablos_Brain Talk_Lunds Universitet, June 3rd 2008 Objectives • To argue for an incremental parsing of constructions that are within the syntax-semantics interface and that, besides the

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_BrainTalk/Pablos.pdf - 2025-05-05

Y.Shtyrov: talk in Lund, June 2008

Y.Shtyrov: talk in Lund, June 2008 1 Yury Shtyrov, MRC CBU, Cambridge Yury Shtyrov MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit Cambridge Neural access to linguistic information: neurophysiological evidence using mismatch negativity Yury Shtyrov, MRC CBU, Cambridge When and where do lexical, semantic and syntactic processes commence in the brain? Leave the ‘where’ for now. What do we know about ‘when’? 2

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_BrainTalk/Shtyrov.pdf - 2025-05-05

LUNDabs

LUNDabs Yaniv Assaf Department of Neurobiology, The George S. Wise Faculty of Life Sciences, The Sagol School of Neuroscience, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel Neuro-plasticity is one of the key processes in brain's physiology. While functional aspects of neuro- plasticity can be studied in-vivo using microscopy and electrophysiology as well as non-invasively with fMRI and EEG, investigation

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_MicroL-2014/Abstract_Assaf.pdf - 2025-05-05

Abstract_Kujala

Abstract_Kujala Plasticity of early neural language processes Teija Kujala Cicero Learning, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland & Cognitive Brain Research Unit, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland We speak and understand speech with a remarkable speed, while we are concurrently able to think: we plan what we say next and analyze what we hear during a conversation. This is likely to be

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_MicroL-2014/Abstract_Kujala.pdf - 2025-05-05

Abstract_Nilsson

Abstract_Nilsson Quantification of diffusional anisotropy in regions of complex tissue microstructure using non-conventional diffusion MRI Markus Nilsson Lund University Bioimaging Center (LBIC) During the last two decades, diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) has become an indispensable tool in neuroscience. The technique enables the mapping of water diffusion anisotropy in nerves in terms of parameter

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_MicroL-2014/Abstract_Nilsson.pdf - 2025-05-05

Abstract_de_Diego_Balaguer

Abstract_de_Diego_Balaguer Brain structural and functional differences associated to language learning abilities Ruth de Diego Balaguer Cognition and Brain Plasticity Group, University of Barcelona Language-related areas within frontal, parietal and temporal cortices are organized in dorsal and ventral segregated but highly interactive streams. Studying individual differences in functional and str

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_MicroL-2014/Abstract_de_Diego_Balaguer.pdf - 2025-05-05

abstract_MicroL_2014_jm

abstract_MicroL_2014_jm Proficiency and brain structure during intense language learning Johan Mårtensson1, Johan Eriksson3, Timothy Brick2, Nils Bodammer2, Magnus Lindgren1, Mikael Johansson1, Lars Nyberg3, Martin Lövdén4 1Lund university, 2Max Planck Institute for Human Development, 3Umeå university, 4Aging Research Center (ARC) Foreign language acquisition can lead to changes in brain structure

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_MicroL-2014/Ma__rtensson_abstract.pdf - 2025-05-05

Shtyrov

Shtyrov Electrophysiological and haemodynamic biomarkers of rapid acquisition of novel wordforms Yury Shtyrov Center of Functionally Integrative Neuroscience, Aarhus University Humans are unique in developing large lexicons; to achieve this, they are able to learn new words rapidly. However, neural bases of this rapid learning, which may be an expression of a more general mechanism rooted in plast

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_MicroL-2014/Shtyrov.pdf - 2025-05-05

Topgaard_abstract

Topgaard_abstract Multidimensional diffusion MRI: From colloid science to learning studies Daniel Topgaard Physical Chemistry, Lund University The structure of the brain is changing during learning processes such as language acquisition. The structural changes take place on a range of length scales: from the formation of new connections between individual neurons to the growth of entire brain regi

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_MicroL-2014/Topgaard_abstract.pdf - 2025-05-05

Microsoft Word - Bianchi_SALC6_abstract.docx

Microsoft Word - Bianchi_SALC6_abstract.docx Ivana Bianchi The perception and cognition of opposites Since time immemorial, it has been recognized in various scientific domains that opposition/contrariety (here used as interchangeable terms) represent a primal relationship in the human cognitive architecture. Early philosophers discussed its fundamental role for many concepts (e.g. pre-socratic ph

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_SALC6/PDF/Bianchi_SALC6_abstract.pdf - 2025-05-05

Microsoft Word - Geeraerts_SALC6_abstract.docx

Microsoft Word - Geeraerts_SALC6_abstract.docx Dirk Geeraerts What's your philosophy? The phenomenological tradition and Cognitive Linguistics Picking up the thread of Geeraerts 1985: 309-370, and Geeraerts 1993, which were the first publications in the history of Cognitive Linguistics to analyze the specific relevance of phenomenology, this talk will offer a couple of footnotes to the current Cog

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_SALC6/PDF/Geeraerts_SALC6_abstract.pdf - 2025-05-05

No title

In this talk, we give a short overview some of the work carried out within the project MovEs II. This project is devoted to the study of motion and space from a semantic typological perspective and across several languages. After a general introduction about the project (goals, methodology, etc.), we focus on two main areas of our research. Firstly, we discuss the importance of variation and less

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_SALC6/PDF/Rosario_Iraide_abstract.pdf - 2025-05-05

Duanmu

Duanmu Prosody and word length in Chinese San Duanmu, University of Michigan The eminent Swedish sinologist Bernhard Karlgren (1918) made an insightful observation of an unusual property of Chinese: Many Chinese words have two synonymous forms, one short (monosyllabic) and one long (disyllabic), such as jian ‘see’ and kan-jian ‘look-see’. The long form is made by adding another morpheme to the sho

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Duanmu.pdf - 2025-05-05

Féry.doc

Féry.doc The disambiguating role of prosody in relative clauses Caroline Féry, Goethe University Frankfurt I will address the following puzzle: In the syntactic literature on relative clauses, it is tacitly or explicitly admitted that users of a language share some implicit knowledge about the relationship between prosody and syntax. As a result, overt prosodic phrasing should help speakers to mak

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Fery.pdf - 2025-05-05

Karlsson-House

Karlsson-House Prosodic boundaries and spontaneous narratives Anastasia Karlsson1 and David House2, 1Lund University, 2Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Stockholm The study presented here is a part of a larger project in which we investigate how word order, intonation and morphology collaborate in conveying information structure in a set of typologically different languages. Languages are group

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Karlsson-House.pdf - 2025-05-05

Riad abstract NGmc accent

Riad abstract NGmc accent A phonological typology of North Germanic accent Tomas Riad, Stockholm University North Germanic tone accent has been typologized on the basis of phonetic notions like ‘number of peaks in accent 2’ (Gårding & Lindblad 1973, Bruce & Gårding 1978), and ‘value of first tone in accent 1’ (Fintoft et al. 1978). The description of tone accent has also often been based on functi

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Riad.pdf - 2025-05-05

Romoeren-Chen

Romoeren-Chen Prosodic focus marking in Swedish children Anna Sara H. Romøren and Aoju Chen, Utrecht University According to the Lund model of Swedish intonation [1], focus is marked by adding a floating high tone to the lexical accent of a focal word, and by downstepping post- focal accents1. Research on prosodic development in Swedish children has primarily been concerned with word prosody [2,3,

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Romoeren-Chen.pdf - 2025-05-05

Soederstroem

Soederstroem Testing predictions – studying word accents and morphology in Swedish Pelle Söderström, Lund University Preliminary results will be reported from a study which investigated how Central Swedish word accents are used in on-line speech processing to predict upcoming information. Participants listened to sentences and judged whether the target noun was singular (suffix associated with Acc

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Soederstroem.pdf - 2025-05-05

Svensson Lundmark

Svensson Lundmark Constant tonal alignment in Swedish word accent II Malin Svensson Lundmark, Lund University Studies on accentual tonal alignment of intonation languages suggest that L in rising (LH) pre-nuclear accents anchors with a specific point in the segmental string, while the timing of H varies. This study investigates if lexical accents, too, exhibit a constant alignment by testing the S

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Svensson_Lundmark.pdf - 2025-05-05

Tronnier-Zetterholm

Tronnier-Zetterholm Intelligibility of Swedish word accents produced by L2-speakers with tonal and non-tonal L1s – a case study Mechtild Tronnier1 and Elisabeth Zetterholm2 1Lund University and 2Linnaeus University This contribution presents a case study on how well speakers of languages of a different tonal typology manage to produce the two tonal word accents in L2- Swedish. Some previous studie

https://konferens.ht.lu.se/fileadmin/user_upload/sol/ovrigt/konferens_bruce-2014/Tronnier-Zetterholm.pdf - 2025-05-05