Do inhibit or not to inhibit during bilingual language control by Mathieu Declerck

Salle des voûtes, St Charles 3 place Victor Hugo, Marseille, France

Do inhibit or not to inhibit during bilingual language control by Mathieu Declerck (BLRI, AMU) One of the mayor topics in the language control literature specifically, and the bilingual literature in general is inhibition, which entails the reduction of non-target language activation and thus interference resolution. In this talk I would discuss the existing evidence […]

Reverse engineering early language learning by Emmanuel Dupoux

Reverse engineering early language learning by Emmanuel Dupoux by (Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Laboratoire de Sciences Cognitives et Psycholinguistique) Decades of research on early language acquisition have documented how infants quickly and robustly acquire their native tongue(s) across large variations in their input and environment. The mechanisms that enable such a feat […]

Gesture as a Window Onto Conceptualization. by Gale Stam

Gesture as a Window Onto Conceptualization by Gale Stam (National Louis University) According to McNeill (1992, 2005, 2012) gestures are as much a part of language as speech is. Together gesture and speech develop from a 'growth point' that has both imagistic and verbal aspects. This model for verbal thought is ""a 'language-imagery' or language-gesture […]

Apes, Language and the Brain by Bill Hopkins

Salle des voûtes, St Charles 3 place Victor Hugo, Marseille, France

Apes, Language and the Brain by Bill Hopkins (Georgia State University) For more than 150 years, philosophers and scientist have pondered the uniqueness of human language with a particular fascination with the linguistic, cognitive and neural capacities of great apes. A majority of the scientific work on this topic has come from so-called ""ape-language"" studies […]

How do central processes cascade into peripheral processes in written language production ? by Sonia Kandel

Salle des voûtes, St Charles 3 place Victor Hugo, Marseille, France

How do central processes cascade into peripheral processes in written language production ? by Sonia Kandel (LPNC & Gipsa-Lab Grenoble (Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS)) With the arrival of internet, tablets and smartphones many people spend more time writing than speaking (email, chat, SMS, etc.). Despite the importance of writing in our society, the studies investigating […]

Statistical learning as an individual ability by Ram Frost

Salle des voûtes, St Charles 3 place Victor Hugo, Marseille, France

Statistical learning as an individual ability by Ram Frost (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem - Department of Psychology) Most research in Statistical Learning (SL) has focused on mean success rate of participants in detecting statistical contingencies at a group level. In recent years, however, researchers show increased interest in individual abilities in SL. What determines […]

Analyzing, Cognitive, and Neural Modeling of Language-Related Brain Potentials by Peter Beim Graben

Salle de conférences 5 avenue Pasteur, Aix-en-Provence, France

Analyzing, Cognitive, and Neural Modeling of Language-Related Brain Potentials by Peter Beim Graben (Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin) How is the human language faculty neurally implemented in the brain? What are the neural correlates of linguistic computations? To which extent are neuromorphic cognitive architectures feasible and could they eventually lead to […]

Learning to take turns : The role of linguistic and interactional cues in children’s conversation by Marisa Casillas

Salle de conférences 5 avenue Pasteur, Aix-en-Provence, France

Learning to take turns : The role of linguistic and interactional cues in children's conversation by Marisa Casillas (Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics) Children begin taking turns with their caregivers long before their first words emerge. But as their turns begin to change from vocalizations to true, verbal utterances, children face a major challenge in […]

Dissociating Prediction and Attention Components in Language by Ruth de Diego-Balaguer

Salle de conférences 5 avenue Pasteur, Aix-en-Provence, France

Dissociating Prediction and Attention Components in Language by Ruth de Diego-Balaguer (ICREA Research Professor - Cognition and Brain Plasticity Unit, Universitat de Barcelona) Speech is composed of sequences of syllables, words and phrases. These elements unfold in time in specific orders. Thus, acquiring a language requires not only learning each of these representations but also […]