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CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260606T064027Z
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20131015T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20131015T100000
SUMMARY:Modeling experiencers in natural language semantics
UID:20260611T090948Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-bd7db559-gt5qm
TZID:Europe/London
LOCATION:Tezpur University\, Assam\, India
DESCRIPTION:<p>Workshop hosted by the 5th Indian School on Logic and its Applications (ISLA 2014)<br> January 6-17\, 2014 (workshop dates: January 13-16)<br> Tezpur University\, Assam\, India<br> <br> Description:<br> <br> There is a long-standing tradition of using *logical *and\, more<br> specifically\, *model-theoretic *tools in the analysis of natural languages.<br> Building on this tradition\, our workshop aims at addressing one specific<br> issue that has been the topic of discussion lately in the areas of formal<br> semantics\, applied logic\, computational linguistics\, and philosophy. The<br> issue at stake is the notion of *experiencer*\, across languages and across<br> linguistic categories. For example\, it is commonly assumed that in a<br> sentence like "Deeti's performance astonished Raj"\, Raj occupies the role<br> of the experiencer. One of the open questions currently under debate is<br> whether this experiencer argument remains present in derived adjectives<br> such as 'astonishing'\, as in "Deeti's performance was astonishing". Another<br> open question is whether derived adjectives like 'astonishing' belong to<br> the same semantic category as morpho-syntactically simple adjectives like<br> 'nice' or 'great'\, which are commonly classified under the label of evaluative<br> adjectives and have elicited a heated debate in semantics and in<br> philosophy. Yet another question is the role of experiencers in other<br> linguistic constructions such as\, e.g.\, *evidential markers* (which do not<br> exist in English but do e.g. In Japanese). In addressing these and other<br> questions concerning experiencers\, our workshop aims at reaching a better<br> understanding of the nature of argument structure in natural language\,<br> which we take to be a key element in understanding the logical patterns<br> that linguistic constructions give rise to\, and in modeling the logic of<br> natural language. Our interdisciplinary workshop will provide a platform<br> for a fruitful exchange between those working in foundational areas in<br> logic and those who are interested in the applications of logic to natural<br> languages.</p>\n<p>Call for papers:<br> <br> We invite abstracts for 40-minute presentations (30 + 10) to be submitted<br> by *October 15* to both of the following addresses:</p>\n<p>berit.gehrke@upf.edu<br> isidora.stojanovic@upf.edu</p>\n<p>Workshop organizers*:<br> <br> Berit Gehrke (CNRS / Paris 7)<br> Isidora Stojanovic (Universitat Pompeu Fabra)</p>
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