The State of the Art in Speech Error Research

LSA Linguistic Institute Workshop
30-31 July 2005
Emerson Hall, Harvard University
Cambridge, MA

Program

 

SATURDAY

EMERSON RM. 105

 

8:30 am

Light Breakfast & Registration

 

Session 1

Chair: TBA

 

9:00 am

Invited Talk: Gary Dell (UIUC)

Speech errors reflect newly learned phonotactic constraints

10:00 am

Discussant: Matt Goldrick
(Northwestern)

 

10:30 am

Question Period

 

10:45 am

Coffee Break

 

Session 2

Chair: TBA

 

11:15 am

Liz Coppock (Stanford)

Competition between plans in syntactic blends: A large corpus study

11:45 am

Invited Talk: Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel (MIT)

What speech error corpora can tell us (and what they can’t)

12:15-2:00 pm

Lunch Break

 

Panel Discussion

Moderators: Carson Schütze, Vic Ferreira

What should we do with our speech error corpora?

2:00 pm

Panelists: Jeri Jaeger, Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel, TBA

Talking Points

3:30 pm

Coffee Break/Poster Set-Up

 

Session 3

Chair: TBA

 

4:00 pm

Helen Leuninger
Eva-Maria Waleschkowski
Daniela Happ
(U. Frankfurt)
Annette Hohenberger (MPI Munich)

The impact of modality on language production: A joined corpus and experimental study

4:30 pm

Invited Talk: Zenzi M. Griffin
(Georgia Tech)

The eyes are right when the mouth is wrong

5:00-6:15 pm

Attended Poster Session (see below)

 

 

 

 

SUNDAY

EMERSON RM. 105

(Posters may be viewed on the 2nd floor throughout the day)

8:30 am

Light Breakfast & Registration

 

Session 4

Chair: Jeri Jaeger

 

9:00 am

Invited Talk: Marianne Pouplier
(U. Edinburgh/Haskins Labs)

Articulatory perspectives on errors

10:00 am

Invited Talk: Joseph Paul Stemberger (UBC)

Gradience and asymmetries in phonological speech errors

11:00 am

Coffee Break

 

11:30 am

Discussant: Stefan Frisch
(U. South Florida)

 

12:00 pm

Question Period

 

12:30 pm

Lunch Break

 

Session 5

Chair: TBA

 

2:00 pm

Invited Talk: Thomas Berg
(U. Hamburg)

A typology of suprasegmental structure

3:00 pm

Discussant: Stefanie Shattuck-Hufnagel (MIT)

 

3:30 pm

Question Period

 

3:45 pm

Coffee Break

 

Session 6

Chair: Kay Bock

 

4:15 pm

Invited Talk: Roland Pfau
(U. Amsterdam)

Cheap repairs: A Distributed Morphology toolkit for sentence construction

5:15 pm

Discussant: Adam Albright (MIT)

 

5:45 pm

Question Period

 

Closing

Chair: TBA

 

6:00 pm

Invited Commentary: Merrill Garrett
(U. Arizona)

The present and future of the state of the art

6:30ish pm

End of Workshop

 

 

 

 

Attended Poster Session
5:00-6:15 pm

SATURDAY
EMERSON 2ND FLOOR HALLWAY

NOTE: Posters may be left up for perusal until the end of the workshop on Sunday.

1.

Adam Buchwald
(Johns Hopkins)

Categorical repairs in speech production: Evidence from aphasia

2.

Jenn-Yeu Chen
(National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan)

The syllable’s role in speech production: The case of Mandarin Chinese

3.

Julie Franck
(U. Geneva)

A syntactic analysis of interference errors in subject-verb agreement

4.

Noriko Iwasaki
(UC Davis)

Japanese case particle errors: Theories of competence and an emerging sentence production model

5.

Jeri Jaeger
(SUNY Buffalo)

Universal vs. language specific factors in speech production planning: The effect of prosody and information structure

6.

Helen Leuninger
(U. Frankfurt)

Sign languages: Representation, processing, and interface conditions

7.

Belén López
(UCL)

Interaction between gesture and speech during word retrieval failures

8.

Lise Menn
(U. Colorado)

Aphasic errors in expressing location: Implications for production models

9.

Bob Slevc
(UCSD)

When pronouns are attracted to the wrong gender

10.

Joseph Paul Stemberger (UBC)
Julio Santiago (U. Granada)
Elvira Pérez
(U. Granada/U. Liverpool)
Alfonso Palma (U. Granada)

Frequency effects in phonological speech errors in Spanish: The David effect on the source of the error

11.

Joseph Paul Stemberger
(UBC)

Comparing effect sizes in naturalistic data: A methodological note

12.

Eva-Maria Waleschkowski
Helen Leuninger
(U. Frankfurt)
Annette Hohenberger (MPI Munich)

The impact of modality on processing morphological information: An experimental approach

13.

Liane Wardlow Lane (UCSD)

A frame-based mechanism for syntactic flexibility

 

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Last updated: July 25, 2005
URL: http://www.bol.ucla.edu/~cschutze/Slips/program.html