Colloquium/Seminar
Colloquium/Seminar
4th Linguistics Colloquium, on November 7(Friday) 2025, at Building 7 #210, Salvador Mascarenhas, Ecole Normale Supérieure/Department of Cognitive Studies(DEC).
3rd Linguistics Colloquium, on October 31(Friday) 2025, at Building 7 #308, Dan Lassiter, University of Edinburgh.
2nd Linguistics Colloquium, on October 30(Thursday) 2025, at Building 7 #308, David I. Beaver, The University of Texas at Austin.
1st Linguistics Colloquium, on October 24(Friday) 2025, at Building 7 #308, Eunsun Jou, KAIST.
Phonetic Faithfulness in Phonology. 12th Linguistics Colloquium, on December 20(Friday) 2024, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Yeong-joon Kim, Seoul National University.
A Degree-QUD Based Perspective on Informativeness. 11th Linguistics Colloquium, on October 25(Friday) 2024, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Linmin Zhang, NYU Shanghai.
LLM시대의 언어학 연구. 10th Linguistics Colloquium, on October 11(Friday) 2024, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Myoung-wan Koo, Sogang University.
Decomposing unaccusativity in the "experiential" world. 9th Linguistics Colloquium, on September 13(Friday) 2024, at Shinyang Building 4 #309, Songhee Kim, Medical College of Wisconsin.
Poetic rhyme as a 'window' to foot structure. 8th Linguistics Colloquium, on September 6(Friday) 2024, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Nina Topintzi, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece.
Beyond and above the segment: the phonology of onsets. Phonology Seminar, on September 2(Monday) 2024, at Shinyang Building 4 #309, Nina Topintzi, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece.
Tongue, larynx, and facial movements during voicing: methods and implications. 7th Linguistics Colloquium, on July 30(Tuesday) 2024, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Suzy Ahn, University of Ottawa.
Second Language Speech Intelligibility and Accent Variability. 6th Linguistics Colloquium, on June 3(Monday) 2024, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Okim Kang, Northern Arizona University.
Towards Human-like Conversational AI: A Cognition-oriented Framework. 5th Linguistics Colloquium, on May 31(Friday) 2024, at Building 7 #308, Jinho D. Choi, Emory University.
Language diversity and contact of Altaic languages in Temperate Asia: Exploring patterns in adjustable quantification and negation. Colloquium, Department of Linguistics co-hosted with Institute of Altaic Studies, on May 30(Thursday) 2024, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Chingduang Yurayong, University of Helsinki/Mahidol University.
Against covert pied piping. 4th Linguistics Colloquium, on May 24(Friday) 2024, at Building 7 #308, Chris Barker, New York University.
Slurring and Honoring. 3rd Linguistics Colloquium, on May 3(Friday) 2024, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Christopher Michael Davis, University of the Ryukyus.
More foreign-accented but more comprehensible: Attrition and amelioration of L1 speech in proficient L2 learners. 2nd Linguistics Colloquium, on March 29(Friday) 2024, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Kakeru Yazawa, University of Tsukuba.
The interface between prosody and syntax in double object constructions in Xitsonga and other Bantu languages. 1st Linguistics Colloquium, on March 18(Monday) 2024, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Seunghun J. Lee, International Christian University.
Pragmatics of spatial descriptions: Sign language loci. 9th Linguistics Colloquium, on December 15(Friday) 2023, at Building 7 #308, Dorothy Ahn, Rutgers University.
Unsupervised learning of phonemes in early language acquisition: Insights from an autoencoder model. 8th Linguistics Colloquium, on October 13(Friday) 2023, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Youngah DO, The University of Hong Kong.
Conditional conjunctions and types of conditionals. 7th Linguistics Colloquium, on July 7(Friday) 2023, at Building 7 #308, Magdalena Kaufmann, University of Connecticut.
The Perception-Production Link: Three Case Studies. 6th Linguistics Colloquium, on June 29(Thurday) 2023, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Andries W. Coetzee, University of Michigan.
A large-scale investigation of syntactic processing reveals misalignments between humans and neural language models. 5th Linguistics Colloquium, on June 9(Friday) 2023, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Tal Linzen, New York University/Google.
Causal analysis of the syntactic representations used by Transformers. 2nd Linguistics Seminar, on June 8(Thurday) 2023, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Tal Linzen, New York University/Google.
Source of syntactic inductive biases in language models. 1st Linguistics Seminar, on June 7(Wednesday) 2023, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Tal Linzen, New York University/Google.
Silent operators at the left periphery. 4th Linguistics Colloquium, on June 2(Friday) 2023, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Anna Szabolcsi, New York University.
From Transformer to ChatGPT and beyond: How Large Language Models Revolutionize AI?. 3rd Linguistics Colloquium, on May 12(Friday) 2023, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Xiaowei Xu, University of Arkansas at Little Rock.
The Conjunction Fallacy: Confirmation or Relevance?. 2nd Linguistics Colloquium, on April 21(Friday) 2023, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, WooJin Chung, Seoul National University.
Changing verbs into mimetics: Reconstruction of a derivational suffix in Historical Korean ('찌그러지다'의 파생법 - 동사와 의태어를 잇는 파생접사의 재구). 1st Linguistics Colloquium, on April 14(Friday) 2023, at Shinyang Building 4 #302, Migyeong Kim, Seoul National University/Chungnam National University.
The typology of locality guides restrictive and accurate tier induction. 14th Linguistics Colloquium, on November 11(Friday) 2022, Seoyoung Kim, Language Data Scientist/Alexa AI.
Expression of focus in OV languages. 13th Linguistics Colloquium, on October 21(Friday) 2022, Stavros Skopeteas, University of Göttingen.
The Morphology-Syntax Connection and the Optional Suspension of Affixes. 12th Linguistics Colloquium, on October 7(Friday) 2022, James Hye Suk Yoon, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.
Judgements Revisited: Testing Syntactic Theories in the Face of Variation. 11th Linguistics Colloquium, on September 23(Friday) 2022, Plesniak Daniel Hoagberg, University of Southern California.
Unique Modality Hypothesis: A constraint on cross-modal semantic composition. 10th Linguistics Colloquium, on August 24(Wednesday) 2022, Dorothy Ahn, Rutgers University.
E-Extension and the Uniformity of Silence (joint work with Ido Benbaji). 9th Linguistics Colloquium, on August 22(Monday) 2022, David Pesetsky, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Bringing Conversational AI from Research into Practice. 8th Linguistics Colloquium, on July 1(Friday) 2022, Jinho D. Choi, Emory University
Intonational variation in the British Isles: the design of a project. 7th Linguistics Colloquium, on May 27(Friday) 2022, Francis Nolan, Cambridge University.
On the properties of null subjects in Sign Languages: the case of French Sign Language (LSF). 6th Linguistics Colloquium, on May 13(Friday) 2022, Carlo Geraci, CNRS-Institut Jean Nicod.
Stress: suprasegmental phonetics or prosodic phonology?. 5th Linguistics Colloquium, on May 6(Friday) 2022, Robert Ladd, University of Edinbrgh.
Field Linguistics and Digital Archive: creating language data resources. 4th Linguistics Colloquium, on April 29(Friday) 2022, Seunghun J. Lee, International Christian University.
Modulating neural activation in the language areas: A transcranial electrical stimulation study. 3rd Linguistics Colloquium, on April 15(Friday) 2022, Shinri Ohta, Kyushu University.
Computational modeling of human sentence processing using Minimalist Grammar. 2nd Linguistics Colloquium, on April 8(Friday) 2022, Jiwon Yun, Stony Brook University.
1) 인공지능 기술동향과 ETRI 언어지능 주요성과 2) AI 음성인식과 실제적응. 1st Linguistics Colloquium, on March 25(Friday) 2022, 1) 이윤근 2) 박전규, ETRI.
Compositional Linguistic Generalization in Artificial Neural Networks. 13th Linguistics Colloquium, on December 20(Monday) 2021, Najung Kim, New York University.
The Pahoturi River Language Documentation Project. 12th Linguistics Colloquium, on December 17(Friday) 2021, Kate Lindsey, Boston University.
Pragmatic Processing in Speech Perception: Prosody, Speaker Variation. 11th Linguistics Colloquium, on November 19(Friday) 2021, Anne Cutler, Western Sydney University.
Bridging the Human Brain and Language: Neurolinguistics, where are we? 10th Linguistics Colloquium, on October 29(Friday) 2021, Zang-Hee Cho, Korea University.
Events are the source of causal readings in the simplest English conditionals. 9th Linguistics Colloquium, on October 22(Friday) 2021, Bridget Copley, CNRS/Université Paris 8.
Phonetic variability and natural class phonotactics. 8th Linguistics Colloquium, on September 24(Friday) 2021, Gillian Gallagher, New York University.
Revisiting the Northeast Asian Vowel Shift. 7th Linguistics Colloquium, on September 17(Friday) 2021, Seongyeon Ko, Queens College, City University of New York.
Harmony and myopia in vocalic plateaux. 6th Linguistics Colloquium, on May 28(Friday) 2021, Donca Steriade, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Emora: the Champion of the 2020 Alexa Prize. 5th Linguistics Colloquium, on May 21(Friday) 2021, Jinho D. Choi, Emory University.
Quexistentials and focus (joint work with Sabine Iatridou and Kees Hengeveld). 4th Linguistics Colloquium, on May 7(Friday) 2021, Floris Roelofsen, ILLC, U. Amsterdam.
Obviation: What is its scope, and is it due to competition?. 3rd Linguistics Colloquium, on April 23(Friday) 2021, Anna Szabolcsi, New York University.
Deep--learning-based spoken dialog systems. 2nd Linguistics Colloquium, on April 16(Friday) 2021, Gary Geunbae Lee, Pohang University of Science and Technology.
Perception and production in the formation of vowel harmony. 1st Linguistics Colloquium, on May 12(Friday) 2021, Amanda Rysling, UC Santa Cruz.
Neural underpinnings of basic combinatorial semantics: evidence from MEG. 12th Linguistics Colloquium, on December 4(Friday) 2020, Songhee Kim, Medical College of Wisconsin.
Do cross-language phonetic relationships provide a full account of L2 speech learning problems?. 11th Linguistics Colloquium, on November 20(Friday) 2020, Ocke-Schwen Bohn, Aarhus University.
From the tongue musculature to the phonological typology: a case study of coronal palatalization. 10th Linguistics Colloquium, on November 13(Friday) 2020, Hayeon Jang, Seoul National University.
A unified analysis of anaphoric expressions in spoken and signed languages. 9th Linguistics Colloquium, on November 6(Friday) 2020, Shigeru Miyagawa, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Structural patterns in the grammar and lexicon evolve for communication efficiency. 8th Linguistics Colloquium, on October 23(Friday) 2020, Andy Wedel, University of Arizona.
The History and principles of the IPA. 7th Linguistics Colloquium, on October 16(Friday) 2020, Michael Ashby, University College London.
A unified analysis of anaphoric expressions in spoken and signed languages. 6th Linguistics Colloquium, on October 16(Friday) 2020, Dorothy Ahn, Rutgers University.
What the Tongue Tells us about Voicing Contrasts. 5th Linguistics Colloquium, on Setember 21(Monday) 2020, Suzy Ahn, UCLA/University of Ottawa.
Event Structures and The Semantic Typology of Verbal Roots Across Languages. 4th Linguistics Colloquium, on Setember 18(Friday) 2020, John Beavers, University of Texas, Austin.
Moral Foundations Analysis of Korean words using Word2Vec: the Case of 'Gapjil' ('갑질'이란 무엇이며 왜 그른가? - 말뭉치 분석을 통한 도덕기반이론적 검토). 3rd Linguistics Colloquium, on September 11(Friday) 2020, Hyunseop Kim, Seoul National University.
Linguistic Modality, Expected Utility, and Confirmation. 2nd Linguistics Colloquium, on August 31(Monday) 2020, WooJin Chung, Institut Jean Nicod/Ecole Normale Superieure.
Introspection: Examining Pathologies in Neural Networks and Racialized Language in Sports Commentary. 1st Linguistics Colloquium, on August 13(Thurday) 2020, Alvin Grissom II, Haverford College.