Author: Stefan Kaufmann

Lisa Matthewson Lectures

The Department of Linguistics is excited to host Lisa Matthewson for our May Linguistics Lecture Series, May 8-11, 2017. Lisa Matthewson is Professor and Distinguished University Scholar in the Department of Linguistics at the University of British Columbia.  The title of her lecture series is “Collaborations in Cross-Linguistic Semantics.”  For details, follow this link.

Meeting May 2 in Oak 105: Sudo 2012

On Tuesday, May 2, Adrian Stegovec will be presenting parts of Yasutada Sudo’s dissertation (MIT 2012, “On the Semantics of Phi Features on Pronouns”), in partial fulfillment of the requirements for credit in LING 6410. The presentation will focus on the sections listed below. Let us know if you want to attend and don’t have access to the dissertation.

“Section 1 (Gender) (19-38), Sections 7, 8, 10 (Person) (138-148; 161-164), and Sections 11 & 13 (Number) (164-166; 180-190). Which is then roughly 50 pages … like a long journal paper.”

 

Talk of interest: Graf on Logic for Linguistic Structures

Logic Group Colloquium on Friday, April 21: Thomas Graf (Stony Brook)

  Fragments of First-Order Logic for Linguistic Structures

Logic has always played a central role in the study of natural language
meaning. But logic can also be used to describe the structure of words
and sentences. Recent research has revealed that these structures are so
simple that they can be modeled with very weak fragments of first-order
logic. Unfortunately, many of these fragments are still not particularly
well-understood on a formal level, which has become a serious impediment
to ongoing research. This talk is thus equally about the known and the
unknown: I will survey the empirically relevant fragments of first-order
logic and explain how they allow for completely new generalizations
about linguistic structures at the word and sentence level. But I will
also highlight the limits of our current understanding and which
mathematical challenges need to be overcome if the logical approach to
natural language is to realize its full potential. Hopefully, an
alliance of linguists, logicians, and computer scientists will be able
to solve these problems in the near future.

Meeting April 18, 2017

This is a joint meeting with the Diachronic Syntax reading group. We’ll be discussing Kai von Fintel (1995) “The Formal Semantics of Grammaticalization,” NELS 25 Proceedings (GLSA, UMass Amherst),Volume 2: Papers from the Workshops on Language Acquisition & Language Change, pp. 175-189. Contact us for more details and/or a copy of the paper.