Check it out at http://sintaxi.debutxaca.com/2012/03/evolang-2012-at-kyoto-i/
At last months Evolang in Kyoto Celia Alba and Oriol Borrega conducted a series of interviews with participants asking what they considered "is the single most important advance in the field in the last few years?" The video is of these interviews is now online with answers from Cedric Boeckx, Simon Kirby, Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini, Kazuo Okanoya, Simon Fisher, Anna Maria di Sciullo, Antonio Benítez-Burraco, Charles Yang, Lluís Barceló i Coblijn, Koji Fujita, Víctor Longa, Jenny Saffran, Aritz Irurtzun, Joana Rosselló, Mauricio Martins, Bart de Boer, Denis Bouchard, Russell Gray, and James Hurford.
Check it out at http://sintaxi.debutxaca.com/2012/03/evolang-2012-at-kyoto-i/
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Call deadline: 13 January 2012
Event Dates: 13 March 2012 Event Location: Kyoto, Japan Event URL: http://kyoto.evolang.org/content/call-papers EVOLANG WORKSHOP CALL FOR PAPERS http://kyoto.evolang.org/content/workshops We invite submissions of abstracts to the following four workshops scheduled for the first day of 9th International Conference on the Evolution of Language (EVOLANG9) to be held 13-16 March, 2012, in Kyoto, Japan: -Language and Brain -Emotion and Language -Animal Communication and Language Evolution -Constructive Approaches to Language Evolution Further details and descriptions of these workshops are available here. In preparing abstracts for submission, please follow the standard EVOLANG stylesheets for 2-page Abstract type submissions. The relevant stylesheets are available here. Please note that the Constructive Approaches to Language Evolution workshop is somewhat flexible and allows submissions of papers between 2-10 pages (These too should be formatted according to the standard EVOLANG stylesheets). Abstracts should be submitted directly to the contact address of the relevant workshop listed on the workshop descriptions page. Please note that the Theoretical Linguistics/Biolinguistics workshop is by invitation only and will not be accepting abstracts. The other four workshops will select 4-8 submitted papers for oral presentation. The abstracts of selected talks will not be included in the main conference proceedings, but will be included in a separate workshop booklet distributed to conference participants and made available for download on the conference website. The conference will be offering limited financial support to help student authors attend the conference to present their own work. This applies equally to students accepted to give presentations as part of the main conference or workshops. Please see the conference website for further details. For further details please see the workshop page of the conference website or contact the organizer of the relevant workshop directly. Important Dates: Submission deadline: 13 Jan 2012 Notification: Early February 2012 Workshops: 13 March 2012 In a recent talk on language evolution at UCL Chomsky made some comments on studies of language evolution which seem to indicate his upcoming talk at Evolang might be quite interesting.
The comments start at approximately 27:00 and the video is available here. Partial transcript: "There is a field called Evolution of language, which has a burgeoning literature, most of which in my view is total nonsense. But anyway, its growing. In fact, it isn't even about evolution of language, its almost entirely speculations about evolution of communication which is a different topic. And its kind of natural topic to look at if your caught up in another myth, a misinterpretation of evolutionary theory, which holds that changes take place only incrementally. Small change, then another small change, and finally you get complex organisms. That was believed at one time, and you can find sentences in darwin... you can quote, thats the bible. But for a long time evolutionary biologists have understood it doesn't work like that. You can have quite sudden changes that, small changes, that lead to huge phenomenal difference. In the area of communication you can mislead yourself into believing that since every organism you can think of, from bacteria to humans, has some kind of communication system, so maybe our communication system us just a slight modification of primates' or whatever you like. But its undoubtedly not true, but at least you can delude yourself into believing it. On the other hand language seems totally separate. These nothing even remotely analogous or nothing at all homologous as far as anyone knows. Theres a few things that look similar, like say songbirds are at such a distance from an evolutionary point of view that its just got to be convergent evolution to the extent that there is a similarity. And there is interesting questions you can study, but only if you take biology in the last 50 years seriously. If you are back to the pop darwinism that you learned in 8th grade thats no good. Anyhow, the fact that theres been no evolution in 5000 years is interesting if anyone really wants to study evolution of language. It raises a lot of questions, but I don't want to get to far from the Poverty of the Stimulus... Call deadline: 30 December 2011
Event Dates: 13 March 2012 Event Location: Kyoto, Japan Event URL: http://kyoto.evolang.org/content/workshops The following five workshops have been announced at next year's Evolang9 in Kyoto.
Two somewhat informal announcements following the conclusion of Evolang8 last week.
Firstly, Evolang9 will be held at Kyoto University in Kyoto, Japan in 2012. Although dates are not yet confirmed, it is tentatively set to run from the 13th to 16th of March. Further details will be posted here as they are announced. Secondly, it was also announced that a sequel to last years Ways to Protolanguage will be held in September 2011, again in Toruń, Poland. Protolang2 aims to be a highly multidisciplinary event featuring work on all aspects of early human language evolution and if it is anything like last years event, it will be well worth attending. Details will be announced at a future date. |