SIS code: 
Semester: 
summer
Instructor: 

NPFL106 Linguistics
2015 Summer

Instructor: Jirka Hana
e-mail: Jirka.LastName@gmail.com (start the email's subject with NPFL106)
Language: Czech or English
Time & Place: Thu 12:20-13:50 

1  Description and objectives of the course

The course will help students to get familiar with advanced topics in linguistics, especially syntax, semantics, historical linguistics and psycholinguistics. Most topics will be addressed both from the perspective of traditional linguistics and from the formal perspective of mathematics and computer science. Students are expected to have basic knowledge of linguistics, for example as provided by NPFL063 - Introduction to General Linguistics.

2  Readings and discussion

In each class, we will discuss one or more papers (sometimes books or dissertations). It is expected that everybody will have read the papers. For each paper, one or two people will be responsible for leading the discussion (in some cases it will be me).

3  Active class participation

"Active participation" refers to your comments and questions during class, your answers to my questions, etc. I do not keep track of whether your answers, etc. are correct, but simply whether or not you participate. It is important that you read the assigned papers (especially if you are leading the discusssion).

4  Grading

Presentation 0-50
Active class participation 0-50
Total: 0-100
 
Grade Points
1 90-100
2 76-89
3 60-75
4 0-59

 

6  Schedule

This is a preliminary schedule, order of the topics and some of the papers might change

 

Date Topic Presenter Reading
Feb 19 Unbounded dependencies  me  
Feb 26 No class  me  
Mar 5 Clitics  me Hana 2007 Chapter 4
Mar 12 Montague Semantics Aneta (slides) Janssen (2006): Montague Semantics. (ELL2)
Mar 19 Information Structure: Vallduví   me Vallduvi & Engdal (discuss the basic setup and then select one or two languages; do not dive into the 'terminological minefield' paragraphs explaining that Vallduvi's 'focus' has 15 different names in other theories and that 'focus' means 17 different things.)
Mar 26 Information Structure: Praguian theory  prof.  Hajičová  
Apr 2 Pragmatics & IS   Roberts (1998)
Apr 9? HPSG  A.Rosen  Levine & Meurers (2006)
Apr 16 Historical   Hock (1991): Principles of Historical Linguistics, Ch.12 Semantic Change.
Apr 23 Categorial Grammar  Miroslav Steedman & Baldridge (2011): Combinatory Categorial Grammar (discuss basic setup and select some phenomena)
Apr 30 Dependency Grammar  Miroslav Duchier & Debusmann (2001): Topological Dependency Trees: A Constraint-based Account of Linear Precedence + Debusmann, Duchier & Kruijff (2004): Extensible Dependency Grammar: A New Methodology
May 7 Psycholinguistics: Processing  Aneta
(slides)
van Gompel & Pickering 2007 (sken) (textual pdf)
May 14 Psycholinguistics: L1 Acq  Josef Lieven (2006): Language Development (ELL2) + Stoel-Gammon (2006): Infancy: Phonological Development (ELL2)
May 21 Psycholinguistics: Bilingualism  ?/Josef Two people present together:
Bilingualism and cognitive development (Bialystok 2012)
Psychoterapy and bilingualism (Santiago-Rivera and Altarriba 2002)
Bilingualism and Alzheimer (Schweizer 2012)

You can split the articles but since there is a non-zero intersection between them, I would suggest you cooperate on them. Be selective, medical/psychoanalitical details are not relevant to us. You can mention them if you find them interesting, but focus on the psycholinguistic part.