Temporal niches in auditory communication
Salle des voûtes, St Charles 3 place Victor Hugo, Marseille, FranceLuc. H Arnal and Keith B. Doelling, Institut de l’Audition, Centre Pasteur, Paris XII. Communication signals such as speech or music, are complex signals that exploit acoustic features in a wide array of timescales. The auditory system responds differently to each timescale creating opportunity for sound designers, composers and human talkers to exploit these temporal […]
CoCoDev
via zoomProduction practice is more effective than comprehension for second language learning Elise Hopman (University of Wisconsin-Madison) Abstract: Whereas most classroom-based language instruction traditionally emphasizes comprehension-based learning, memory research suggests that language production activities may provide a stronger learning experience than comprehension practice, due to the meaningfully different task demands involved in producing versus comprehending language. […]
CoCoDev
via zoomBabyBERTa: Learning More Grammar With Small-Scale Child-Directed Language Philip Huebner (University of Illinos, Urbana-Champaign) Abstract: Transformer-based language models have taken the NLP world by storm. However, their potential for addressing important questions in language acquisition research has been largely ignored. In this work, we examined the grammatical knowledge of RoBERTa (Liu et al., 2019) when […]
Computational study of active and interactive word learning
via zoomLieke Gelderloos, a Ph.D. researcher at Tilburg University, whose work is at the intersection of cognitive science, linguistics, and artificial intelligence The zoom link: https://univ-amu-fr.zoom.us/j/2515421853 Abstract: Models of cross-situational word learning typically characterize the learner as a passive observer. However, a language learning child can actively participate in verbal and non-verbal communication. We present a computational model […]
Aurélie Bidet-Caulet
FRUMAM 3 place Victor Hugo, Marseille, FranceHow does the human brain resist auditory distraction? One main challenge for the attentive brain is to resist distracting information. Auditory distraction can result from predictable irrelevant information (e.g. ongoing background noise) or from unexpected, transient and salient distracting events (e.g. phone ring, fire alarm…). Using intracranial EEG, scalp EEG and MEG data combined with […]
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via zoomTBA Okko Räsänen (Tampere University)
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via zoomJonathan Ginzburg (Université de Paris)
Language embodiment and relativity: Evidence in Chinese-English bilinguals
via zoomGuillaume Thierry Bangor University, Bangor, UK As soon as we master a language, several of our cognitive abilities that do not readily require language to operate and are seemingly independent from it interact with language representations in a highly sophisticated fashion, reflecting the highly integrated nature of human cognition. Examples of such cognitive […]
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via zoomAsli Ozyurek (Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behavior)
Teaching an old word new tricks? Phonological updates in the bilingual mental lexicon
Salle de conférences 5 avenue Pasteur, Aix-en-Provence, FranceIsabelle Darcy Indiana University / ILCB / IMéRA Listening to speech in your native language is easy. Recognizing the words spoken in conversation is generally an automatic and smooth everyday process in the first language (L1). Even in noisy or otherwise less than ideal conditions, performance is surprisingly robust. But anyone who has attempted to […]