Dear All,
The Language Comprehension Lab cordially invites you to the following talk by:
Peter W. Culicover, Ohio State University, USA
Date: Thursday, Nov 6, 2025
Time: 9:30 AM – 10:30 AM
Venue: Language Comprehension Lab (QS D513)
Title: Constructional Reflections
Abstract: My overarching goal is to seek explanations of why human languages are the way
they are. A constructional approach sharpens this question along the following lines. (i)
Where do constructions come from? (ii) Why do constructions take the form that they have?
(iii) What kinds of constructions exist in natural language? (iv) Why are some logically
possible constructions (quasi-)universal, and others not, and others apparently
non-existent?
In past work, I have offered a range of assumptions, intuitions, and speculations about
these questions. In this talk, I will explore some of them, focusing on the possible
empirical consequences of three ideas: (i) The Force, which promotes (or ‘pushes for’) the
expression of all aspects of meaning using linguistic form. (ii) Economy, the assumption
that grammars are organized to (more-or-less) efficiently express aspects of meaning,
especially the conceptual core. (iii) The Bottleneck, which severely restricts the range
of meanings that can be encoded in a single linguistic expression.
Peter W. Culicover is a Professor Emeritus at the Ohio State University, where he served
as the founding Director of the Center for Cognitive Science (1989-2003) and as Chair of
the Department of Linguistics (1998-2006). His research primarily focuses on understanding
and explaining the syntactic structure of human languages. He has explored various topics,
including language learnability, computational modeling of language acquisition and
language change, the grammar of focus, grammatical constructions, the grammar of
contemporary English, and the architecture of grammar.
Kind regards,
Attila
______________________________________________
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Dear All,
This is a kind reminder that the Language Comprehension Lab will host the following talk
tomorrow, to which everyone is invited:
Speaker: Peter W. Culicover, Ohio State University, USA
Date: Thursday, Nov 6, 2025
Time: 9:30 AM – 10:30 AM
Venue: Language Comprehension Lab (QS D513)
Title: Constructional Reflections
Abstract: My overarching goal is to seek explanations of why human languages are the way
they are. A constructional approach sharpens this question along the following lines. (i)
Where do constructions come from? (ii) Why do constructions take the form that they have?
(iii) What kinds of constructions exist in natural language? (iv) Why are some logically
possible constructions (quasi-)universal, and others not, and others apparently
non-existent?
In past work, I have offered a range of assumptions, intuitions, and speculations about
these questions. In this talk, I will explore some of them, focusing on the possible
empirical consequences of three ideas: (i) The Force, which promotes (or ‘pushes for’) the
expression of all aspects of meaning using linguistic form. (ii) Economy, the assumption
that grammars are organized to (more-or-less) efficiently express aspects of meaning,
especially the conceptual core. (iii) The Bottleneck, which severely restricts the range
of meanings that can be encoded in a single linguistic expression.
Peter W. Culicover is a Professor Emeritus at the Ohio State University, where he served
as the founding Director of the Center for Cognitive Science (1989-2003) and as Chair of
the Department of Linguistics (1998-2006). His research primarily focuses on understanding
and explaining the syntactic structure of human languages. He has explored various topics,
including language learnability, computational modeling of language acquisition and
language change, the grammar of focus, grammatical constructions, the grammar of
contemporary English, and the architecture of grammar.
Kind regards,
Attila
______________________________________________
Subscribe by sending an empty mail to talks-subscribe(a)cogsci.ceu.edu
Unsubscribe by sending an empty mail to talks-unsubscribe(a)cogsci.ceu.edu