Csaba Pléh
distinguished visiting professor
CEU Dept of Cognitive Science
1051 Budapest Nádor u. 9 Hungary
office: Október 6. u. 7, I. e 104
Tel.: 36 303493735 plehcsaba.eu
view editor, Hungarian Journal of Psychology
member of HAS and AE
________________________________
From: Judit Gervain <judit.gervain(a)parisdescartes.fr>
Sent: Wednesday, December 6, 2017 10:22:08 AM
To: Judit Gervain
Subject: Fwd: workshop: Artificial Grammar Learning: Implications of domain, modality and
species differences
Begin forwarded message:
From: Elisabetta Versace
<elisabetta.versace@unitn.it<mailto:elisabetta.versace@unitn.it>>
Subject: workshop: Artificial Grammar Learning: Implications of domain, modality and
species differences
Date: 5 December 2017 at 22:16:39 GMT+1
To: elisabetta versace
<Elisabetta.Versace@unitn.it<mailto:Elisabetta.Versace@unitn.it>>
Dear colleagues,
we are happy to invite you to the Evolang 2018<http://evolang.cles.umk.pl/> workshop
https://evolang.cles.umk.pl/agl-workshop
Artificial Grammar Learning: Implications of domain, modality and species differences
16th April 2018 in Torun (Poland)
Call for abstracts
Detecting regularities in the world allows individuals to make sense of the countless
inputs they are exposed to, and to generalize to new contexts and stimuli. This poses
interesting parallels between the processing of linguistic and non-linguistic stimuli. The
Artificial Grammar Learning approach has spiked research in this area on a wide range of
abilities, developmental stages and species from acoustic modality in neonates and
songbirds to visual pattern generalization in domestic chicks. In this workshop, we will
discuss the recent developments and advancements in the field of Artificial Grammar
Learning and its implication for the study of language. By bringing together researchers
from different disciplines, we will host an interactive, interdisciplinary workshop that
will pave the way not only for fruitful discussion but also for future collaborations and
renewing work on the learning abilities across the animal kingdom and developmental
stages.
We welcome abstracts for short presentations (10-15 minutes followed by 5 minutes
discussion) on how Artificial Grammar Learning across species, modalities and
developmental stages can inform our knowledge and investigation on the evolution of
language.
Please send an abstract that does not exceed 2 pages (excluding references) using the
formatting guidelines of the main
conference<http://www.evolang.org/submissions>ns>, to
agl.evolang@gmail.com<mailto:agl.evolang@gmail.com> by December 21st. Notification
of acceptance by December 30th (please note that the deadline for early bird registration
to the conference is December 31st).
Confirmed speakers
Judit Gervain<http://lpp.parisdescartes.cnrs.fr/people/judit-gervain/> (Université
Paris Descartes, France) will speak about “The frequency-based bootstrapping of basic word
order in infants and rats”
Ruth Sonnweber<http://www.eva.mpg.de/primat/staff/ruth-sonnweber/index.html> (Max
Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany) will speak about
“Cross-modal processing of structural information”
Michelle
Spierings<https://cogbio.univie.ac.at/people/postdoctoral-researchers/michelle-spierings/>
(Department of Cognitive Biology, University of Vienna, Austria) will speak about
“Artificial grammar learning in birds”
Elisabetta Versace<http://r.unitn.it/en/cimec/abc/abc-team-members> (Center for
Mind/Brain Science, University of Trento, Italy) will speak about “Artificial grammars in
visual modality: A comparative perspective”
Gesche Westphal-Fitch<http://homepage.univie.ac.at/gesche.w.fitch> (Department of
Cognitive Biology, University of Vienna, Austria) will speak about “Performance on a
visual Artificial Grammar Learning task in hearing and deaf participants”
Ben Wilson<http://www.ncl.ac.uk/ion/staff/profile/benjaminwilson.html#research>
(Newcastle University Medical School, UK) will speak about “Behavioural and neuroimaging
insights into structured sequence learning in humans and nonhuman primates”.
We look forward to hearing from you.
Thank you for spreading this notice to colleagues that might be interested.
Sincerely,
Elisabetta Versace (University of Trento) and Michelle Spierings (University of Vienna)
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Elisabetta Versace, PhD
Center for Mind/Brain Sciences
University of Trento
Piazza della Manifattura 1
38068, Rovereto, Italy
email: elisabetta.versace@unitn.it<mailto:elisabetta.versace@unitn.it>
twitter: @so_evolutionary
———
Judit Gervain
Laboratoire Psychologie de la Perception
UMR8242 CNRS & Université Paris Descartes
45 rue des Saints-Pères, Paris, 75006, FRANCE
+33142862197 (office)
judit.gervain@parisdescartes.fr<mailto:judit.gervain@parisdescartes.fr>
https://sites.google.com/site/juditgervain/