Category Archives: Uncategorized

Seth Cable at the University of Tübingen

On November 9th, Seth Cable visited the University of Tübingen and presented an invited talk on some of his recent work on the morpho-semantics of negative predicates in Tlingit. Former UMass visitors (and students) in attendance included Sigrid Beck, Polina Berezovskaya, Vera Hohaus, Anna Howell, Natasha Korotkova, Paula Menendez Benito, Konstantin Sachs, and Igor Yanovich (sincerest apologies to anyone who may have been left out).

As goes without saying, Seth had an incredibly wonderful and memorable time!

Chancellor’s Citation to Tom Maxfield

It is with great pleasure that I can now tell you that the Chancellor’s Citation was awarded to Tom Maxfield on Monday, May 8, 2017 for his exemplary contributions to the success and smooth running of the department and to the well-being of its faculty and students. Thank you, Tom, for all you’ve done! Please join me in congratulating Tom. You might also stop by Tom’s office to congratulate him yourselves.

Una Stojnic in Semantics Seminar

Una Stojnic will present her joint work on pronouns (with Matthew Stone and Ernie Lepore) in Daniel Altshuler’s seminar this week (Monday from 2:30 pm to 5:15 pm in N458). Here is a draft of the paper. Please don’t distribute it without permission.  There will be a reception (with some fruits, chocolates and beverages) after her talk.

Una is a Bersoff Assistant Professor/ Faculty Fellow in Philosophy at NYU, and a Research Fellow in philosophy at the School of Philosophy at the Australian National University. She mainly works in philosophy of language, formal semantics and pragmatics of natural languages and philosophical logic.

From her website: “My research aims at understanding and modeling language and linguistic communication. This situates my work within a network of traditional questions in philosophy of language, as well as within a set of empirical questions in linguistics and cognitive sciences. My most recent work concerns the interplay between context-change and context-sensitivity, and the way in which the mechanisms of information structure and discourse coherence affect the resolution of semantic ambiguities.”

 

Paper by Cable in Natural Language and Linguistic Theory

I’m very happy to announce that my paper, “The Implicatures of Optional Past Tense in Tlingit, and the Implications for ‘Discontinuous Past'” has been published by NLLT. It won’t be in print for a while, but as usual, it will be available on-line until then. If you’re interested, you can access a free read-only version at the link below:
http://rdcu.be/niPr

FASAL 7 Deadline Reminder

Deadline: December 2, 2016. Conference date: March 4-5, 2017.  Conference location: MIT.

The conference website is here.

The Department of Linguistics & Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) will be hosting the seventh Formal Approaches to South Asian Languages (FASAL 7) workshop.

Invited speakers:
Ashwini Deo (Ohio State)
Miriam Butt (Konstanz)
Norvin Richards (MIT)

Abstracts should be submitted through EasyChair.

Any questions about the workshop should be directed to fasal7@mit.edu

 

UMass Linguistics at Jackson Street Elementary School “Science Night”

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Thank you to Kristine Yu, Michael Wilson, Rong Yin, Jaieun Kim, Coral Hughto, Leland Kusmer, Andrew Lamont, and Katie Tetzloff for putting together an amazing performance at the ‘Science Night’ held at Jackson Street School in Northampton. Parents and students greatly enjoyed the presentations and activities, and gave a lot of positive word to the event organizers.

Kristine and Andrew lead helped kids to make their own model larynxes, and teach them about the anatomy of speech. Leland produced spectrographs of the kids saying their own name, used them to teach the kids about acoustics and then printed them out to take home. Katie walked the kids through the sounds of the world’s languages, the IPA, and then helped them to write their own names in IPA. Coral demonstrated the McGurk Effect to bewildered students and parents. Michael, Rong, and Jaieun taught the children and the parents about recursion in human language, using iPad-based materials developed by the members of LARC.

Thank you to all of them for their incredible energy and chemistry with both the kids and their parents. Everyone walked away with both an understanding and an excitement about linguistics science!

The organizers of the event have already promised to ‘knock on our door’ again for next year’s science night…

Ray Jackendoff gives a colloquium talk on 10/28

This coming Friday, October 28, at 3:30 pm in room 400

Ray Jackendoff (Tufts University) will give a talk

Morphology in the Mental Lexicon

(joint work with Jenny Audring, University of Leiden)

Abstract

We explore a theory of morphology grounded in the outlook of the Parallel Architecture (PA, Jackendoff 2002), drawing in large part on Construction Morphology (Booij 2010).  The fundamental goal is to describe what a speaker stores and in what form, and to describe how this knowledge is put to use in constructing novel utterances.  A basic tenet of PA is that linguistic structure is built out of independent phonological, syntactic, and semantic/conceptual structures, plus explicit interfaces that relate the three structures, often in many-to-many fashion.

Within this outlook, morphology emerges as the grammar of word-sized pieces of structure and their constituents, comprising morphosyntax and its interfaces to word phonology, lexical semantics, and phrasal syntax.  Canonical morphology features a straightforward mapping among these components; irregular morphology is predominantly a matter of noncanonical mapping between constituents of morphosyntax and phonology.

As in Construction Grammar and Construction Morphology, PA encodes rules of grammar as schemas:  pieces of linguistic structure that contain variables, but which are otherwise in the same format as words – in other words, the grammar is part of the lexicon.  Novel utterances are constructed by instantiating variables in schemas through Unification.  A compatible morphological theory must likewise state morphological patterns in terms of declarative schemas rather than procedural or realizational rules.

Non-productive morphological patterns can be described in terms of schemas that are formally parallel to those for productive patterns.  However, they do not encode affordances for building new structures online; rather, they motivate relations among items stored in the lexicon.  Productive schemas can be used in this way as well, in addition to their standard use in building novel structures; hence they can be thought of as schemas that have “gone viral.”  Interestingly, this classification proves useful also for extending syntactic schemas to idioms and other fixed expressions.

This raises the question of how lexical relations are to be expressed.  Beginning with the well-known mechanism of inheritance, we show that inheritance should be cashed out, not in terms of minimizing the number of symbols in the lexicon, but in terms of increased redundancy (or lower entropy).  We propose a generalization of inheritance to include lexical relations that are nondirectional and symmetrical, and we develop a notation that pinpoints the regions of commonality between pairs of words, between words and schemas, and between pairs of schemas.

We conclude that linguistic theory should be concerned with relations among lexical items, from productive to marginal, at least as much as with the online construction of novel forms.  We further conclude that the lexicon is richly textured, in a fashion that invites comparison with other domains of human knowledge.

Sound Workshop Schedule — Fall 2016

9/19 Preparation for NECPhon
9/26 Hauser Dispersion squib, Hauser & Hughto Opacity paper
10/3 Jarosz & Rysling Preparation for NELS, AMP
10/11 Hauser & Kusmer Koasati reduplication; Mullin Preparation for NELS
10/15 Hauser & Hughto Preparation for AMP
10/24 Available
10/31 Hughto Halloween sounds
11/7 Kusmer TshiVenda
11/14 Prickett GP
11/28 Yu Grant or Preparation for Yale
12/5 Hauser Dissertation
12/12 End of semester celebration