Santa Crucians at AMLaP 30

In September, the 30th Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing (AMLaP) conference took place at the University of Edinburgh, with many current and former students and faculty of the Department presenting posters or talks:

  • Linguistic boundaries delineate contextual domains in memory
    Lalitha Balachandran and Matt Wagers
  • Beyond the left hemisphere: MEG evidence for right temporal lobe recruitment in Bangla morphosyntax processing
    Dustin Chacón, with
    Swarnendu Moitra and Linnaea Stockall
  • Breaking down inflected words and putting the pieces back together involve the left occipitotemporal and orbitofrontal regions: MEG evidence from Tagalog
    Dustin Chacón, with Dave Kenneth Cayado, Samantha Wray, Marco Chia-Ho Lai, Suhail Matar, and Linnaea Stockall
  • Processing covert dependencies: A study on Turkish wh-in-situ
    Duygu Demiray (University of Massachusetts, Amherst) and Matt Wagers
  • Effects of foil processing, decision-making, and initial attention in the Maze task
    Jack Duff (Saarland University), Pranav Anand, and Amanda Rysling
  • Deprioritizing linguistic material: The role of givenness on focus and filler-gap processing
    Morwenna Hoeks (University of Osnabrück), Maziar Toosarvandani, and Amanda Rysling
  • Linguistic boundaries reduce encoding interference in temporal order memory
    Stephanie Rich (Concordia University), Lalitha Balachandran, and Matt Wagers
  • Animacy and long-distance pronominal anaphora in discourse: Evidence from the Maze
    Kelsey Sasaki (Oxford University), Pranav Anand, Amanda Rysling
  • Subject islands are not caused by information structure clashes: evidence from topicalization
    Niko Webster, Matthew Kogan, Mandy Cartner (Tel Aviv University), Matt Wagers, and Ivy Sichel

Tamura and Webster at SICOGG/WAFL

Image of Jun Tamura, Haoze Li, and Niko Webster (from left to right)

Jun Tamura, Haoze Li, and Niko Webster (from left to right)

Over the summer, PhD students Jun Tamura and Niko Webster traveled to Jeonju, South Korea to attend a joint meeting of the Seoul International Conference on Generative Grammar and the Workshop on Altaic Formal Linguistics, which took place at Jeonbuk National University in August. Niko presented a talk titled “Acategorial licensing of internal arguments in Korean”. Jun presented a solo talk on “Superlatives without degree abstraction: Ichiban superlatives in Japanese,” as well as a joint talk with Professor Haoze Li, a recent Visiting Assistant Professor in the Department and now Assistant Professor at Nanyang Technological University.

Interview with Professor Dustin Chacón

Image of Professor Dustin Chacón

Professor Dustin Chacón

The Department welcomed a new faculty member this fall, Professor Dustin Chacón, a psycholinguist whose research investigates sentence processing and language acquisition, using neurolinguistic methods (including EEG) with a special emphasis on languages of South Asia.

Now that the academic year has started, the WHASC Editor got the chance to ask Dustin a few questions about his career and research.

How did you get into linguistics?

As cliché as it sounds, I always had some interest in language, and I can’t point to any one particular moment when I decided to become a linguist. Sometime in high school I started learning Japanese and Bengali, but this was sparked by my interest in video games and wanting to gossip in secret with my Bangladeshi-American friends at lunch. But, at some point, I made some friends online who were interested in language and Linguistics (at least two of whom are also professional linguists and friends today). And, I have dim memories of conducting a study in a local kindergarten testing the mutual exclusivity bias in language acquisition for my regional science fair (I did not win). Despite all of this, it wasn’t until I arrived at my undergraduate institution University of Minnesota and took my Introduction to Linguistics class that I actually had any idea what Linguistics even was, or what a career in Linguistics could be. But, suffice to say, I was more than eager to be a student. The rest is history!

What is a project that you are currently working on?

I have an NSF grant with Liina Pylkkänen at NYU investigating the ‘sentence superiority effect’. A number of studies have shown that short sentences (3-5 words long) displayed very quickly, in one glance (200ms) are recalled more accurately than word lists or ungrammatical sentences. This could suggest that there’s some sense in which we can process sentences without necessarily reading them word-by-word, as is commonly assumed in both psycholinguistic theory and methods. But, how does this work? Thinking through this problem really requires us to rethink the relationship between how stimuli are displayed, properties of the visual system, and ‘bottom-up’ and ‘top-down’ psycholinguistic mechanisms. In our collaboration, we measure the neural responses during this 200ms glance using electro- and magnetoencephalography (EEG/MEG), and identify a few factors that this neural sentence superiority effect is (and isn’t!) sensitive to. This paradigm can be leveraged to explore lots of different questions about how the brain processes and represents aspects of sentence structure, especially when conducted in parallel to traditional experiment designs. It also challenges us to think more carefully about the psychology of reading and how it relates to the brain’s detection of grammatical structure in words and phrases more generally.

What is a big question in your subdiscipline that excites you, and why?

A long-standing mystery in the cognitive neuroscience of language is whether there are any regions of the brain or patterns of brain activity that specifically correspond to syntax, distinct from compositional semantics, lexical meaning, or morphology. This is motivated by both classic questions about modularity of the mind and why only humans have language as we know it. A few key areas have been identified and studied extensively, but we are still wrapping our heads around the findings as a field. I’m interested in this question because I’m generally interested in syntax and in the brain. But, even more than that, I think there is potential for gaining a deeper understanding of language in the brain. When we study ‘syntax’ in the brain, are we interested in syntactic processes (Merge, Agree), syntactic representations (morphosyntactic features), kinds of phenomena (agreement, movement, case), or computations involved in sentence processing (memory retrieval, prediction)? When we study syntax in the ‘brain’, should the theories be stated at the level of major brain regions (left inferior frontal gyrus, posterior temporal lobe), or distributed patterns of neural activity over time and space? How similar or different is ‘syntax in the brain’ in different languages, exactly? There’s still a lot that we don’t know, and I think we’ll make the most progress with careful consideration of what we’ve learned in linguistic theory and psycholinguistics, and there’s lots of room for creativity in experiment design and theorizing.

What is the most interesting thing you have seen/done/learned about in Santa Cruz so far?

The most exciting thing has been building our new EEG lab space! But perhaps the most interesting thing was the Santa Cruz Ghost Tour, in which I learned which rides and attractions on the Boardwalk are haunted, and our resident ghost pirate ship. I can’t say that I’ve seen any ghosts recently myself, but now I know where to watch out for them!

Welcome to the Department, Dustin!

Another academic year begins

On Friday, September 27th, the Department came together at the Cowell Provost House to kick off the academic year with our annual fall welcome event. With clear skies and beautiful views, it was the perfect opportunity for faculty and graduate students to reconnect after the summer and meet the newest members of the department.

The department at the welcoming event

At the event, we welcomed six new PhD students to the Department. Nadine Abdel-Rahman, Jungu Kang, Hareem Khokhar, Subhekshya Shrestha, and Emma Smith are starting as first years, while Larry Lyu has transitioned from the MA track to the PhD program.

To the MA program, we were excited to welcome Amenia Denson, as well as Cal Boye-Lynn and Joshua Lieberstein, who are joining as BA/MA students.

The Department also warmly welcomed Dustin Chacón, who joined as an Assistant Professor this fall. 

The event was filled with conversations about recent research and upcoming projects. In the coming weeks, we will be sharing updates from faculty and students about their research adventures and what’s on the horizon for this academic year. Stay tuned!

(As an added surprise, a few of the wild turkeys that inhabit the campus joined us, appearing as though they, too, had enjoyed a productive and restful summer. )

The event was graced by a group of turkeys

Ian Carpick at LabPhon

In late June, PhD Student Ian Carpick attended the 19th Conference on Laboratory Phonology: LabPhon 19 in Korea, where he presented his poster, “Learned performance or auditory bias: carryover vs. anticipatory nasal coarticulation,” based on his first Qualifying Paper (QP) project. Shortly after, Ian successfully defended his QP by Zoom. The committee comprised Ryan Bennett, Grant McGuire, and Amanda Rysling, who chaired the QP. Congratulations, Ian!

Maya Wax Cavallaro in Guatemala, Mexico

This summer, PhD student Maya Wax Cavallaro spent three weeks in San Pedro la Laguna, Sololá, Guatemala, conducting fieldwork on Tz’utujil (a Mayan language). Then, Maya spent another three weeks in Santiago Laxopa, Oaxaca, Mexico, studying Santiago Laxopa Zapotec (an Otomanguean language). During her time in these regions, she collected data for her dissertation, focusing on the phonetic and phonological processes involved in the devoicing of domain-final sonorant consonants. 

(Maya in Guatemala)

(Maya in Oaxaca)

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