Funding will support a special session at the March 2012 meeting of the CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing, to be held at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. For 25 years the CUNY Conference series has focused on central issues in psycholinguistics, embracing a full range of empirical methodologies and theoretical perspectives in linguistics, psychology, computer science, and cognitive neuroscience. Responding to a remarkable acceleration of recent research developments in all of these contributing disciplines, the special session will showcase current models of how language knowledge and language processing interrelate. This fundamental question underpins all empirical and theoretical studies of sentence processing. Is it possible to embed a grammar, as devised by linguists, as a working component of a processing mechanism for language comprehension or production? Or is it a mistake even to suppose that 'linguistic' grammars might articulate with processing in such a fashion? To achieve a comprehensive understanding of how the human brain is capable of this most distinctively human activity, a sure sense is needed of the interplay between language knowledge and use. The special session also marks a broadening of the traditional focus of research on syntactic processing to include the processing of semantics (sentence meanings) and prosody (the melody and rhythm of spoken sentences).

Six invited speakers will address these topics and the special session will be rounded out with related presentations selected from submitted abstracts. Collectively, these presentations will both deepen and broaden the questions that will occupy the psycholinguistics community in coming years.

The conference will welcome a new generation of young scientists into the international psycholinguistics community by supporting students' participation with reduced registration fees and travel support. Publication of a volume containing the contributions of the invited speakers and related submitted presentations will make the benefits of this special occasion available to a wider audience.

Project Report

Funding supported a special session at the March 2012 meeting of the CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing, held at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. For 25 years the CUNY Conference series has focused on central issues in psycholinguistics, embracing a full range of empirical methodologies and theoretical perspectives in linguistics, psychology, computer science, and cognitive neuroscience. Responding to a remarkable acceleration of recent research developments in all of these contributing disciplines, the special session showcased current models of how language knowledge and language processing interrelate. This fundamental question underpins all empirical and theoretical studies of sentence processing. To achieve a comprehensive understanding of how the human brain is capable of this most distinctively human activity, a sure sense is needed of the interplay between language knowledge and language use. Seven invited speakers (five from institutions in the United States, two from Europe) addressed these topics, and the special session was rounded out with related paper and poster presentations selected from submitted abstracts, available at http://cuny2012.commons.gc.cuny.edu. The conference was attended by over 350 scholars, from the United States and 16 other countries in Europe, Asia, North America, and South America. The conference welcomed a new generation of young scientists into the international psycholinguistics community: 92 of the conference presenters were students. The award supported students' participation via reduced registration fees for the 154 student registrants and travel support for the 18 students presenting papers at the conference. Publication of a volume containing the contributions of the invited speakers and related submitted presentations will make the benefits of this special occasion available to a wider audience. The special issue of the Journal of Psycholinguistic Research (volume 44, issue 1, 2015) will include an introduction by co-PIs Janet Dean Fodor and Eva M. Fernández, and five papers by invited speakers: Christiano Chesi, Noam Chomsky, Lyn Frazier, Shevaun Lewis & Colin Phillips, and Ivan Sag & Tom Wasow.

Agency
National Science Foundation (NSF)
Institute
Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences (BCS)
Type
Standard Grant (Standard)
Application #
1147525
Program Officer
William Badecker
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2012-02-15
Budget End
2014-07-31
Support Year
Fiscal Year
2011
Total Cost
$27,700
Indirect Cost
Name
CUNY Graduate School University Center
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10016