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[Apologies for cross-posting]

The Autogramm project (autogramm.github.io/en) invites applications for a 3-year PhD position starting between now and May 2023. The position is funded by ANR (Agence National de la recherche) and located in Paris, France.

The goal of the thesis is to contribute to the development of quantitative typology by participating in the construction of a database on a large number of typologically diverse languages and by focusing on the quantitative analysis of this dataset (Gerdes et al. 2021, Levshina 2022). Corpora are available for a growing number of languages, thanks in particular to corpora annotated in interlinear gloss (IGT, see for example the Pangloss collection, pangloss.cnrs.fr) or with the Universal Dependencies annotation scheme (UD, universaldependencies.org and its SUD variant, surfacesyntacticud.github.io/). These databases allow for corpus-based typological studies that have several advantages, such as:
- the results are based directly on primary data (corpora);
- the results are reproducible as long as the data are freely accessible;
- they allow quantitative analysis: rather than being characterized as OV or VO, a language can be said to have a given percentage of OV constructions — associated with conditioning factors (Levshina 2019, Gerdes et al. 2019, Futrell et al. 2015 ; See also typometrics.elizia.net/#/).

The candidate will work on one of the following topics:

- How to identify cross-linguistic regularities from a set of corpora (see for example Gerdes et al. 2021)?
- What quantitative information can be extracted from a corpus that is useful for typological characterizations? Which features require prior annotation of the data and what is the nature of the annotations needed?
- How to improve methods for dealing with issues of representativeness in typological databases (Guzmán Naranjo & Becker 2022).
- How to improve methods for dealing with the issue of the commensurability of the categories used in the description of the different languages? How can we check the consistency of the data? How to detect the presence of aberrations in some treebanks (categorization choices not conforming to the universal scheme, e.g. assignment of the subject relation in ergative languages, use of the ADJ category in languages without real adjectives, etc.)?
- How to visualize quantitative typological data (faceted, multidimensional, etc.)

The work will be conducted in the context of the ANR Autogramm project (autogramm.github.io/), which gathers a community of researchers in field linguistics, typology, formal linguistics and automatic language processing. A growing ecosystem of tools is developed in the project for the quantitative typological generalization, in particular with UD treebanks (see grew.match.fr, typometrics.elizia.net/#/ surfacesyntacticud.github.io …)

Applications and questions can be sent to Sylvain Kahane <sylvain@kahane.fr>

Applications should include:
- Cover letter outlining interest in the position
- Names of two referees
- Curriculum Vitae (CV) with publications
- Copy of MA degree
- University grade sheet of at least the two last years

Please share this on to any potentially interested parties!
Best regards,
Sylvain Loiseau (on behalf of the Autogramm project)

Futrell Richard, Tina Hickey, Aldrin Lee, Eunice Lim, Elena Luchkina, Edward Gibson (2015). Cross-linguistic gestures reflect typological universals: A subject-initial, verb-final bias in speakers of diverse languages, Cognition 136, 215–221.

Gerdes Kim, S. Kahane, X. Chen (2022). Rediscovering Greenberg's Word Order Universals in UD, Universal Dependencies Workshop 2019, Syntaxfest.

Gerdes Kim, Kahane, S., and Chen, X. (2021). Typometrics from implicational to quantitative universals in word order typology. Glossa, 6(1): 17.

Naranjo, M. G. and Becker, L. (2022). Statistical bias control in typology. Linguistic Typology, 26(3), 605–670.

Levshina, N. (2019). Token-based typology and word order entropy: A study based on universal dependencies. Linguistic Typology, 23(3), 533 – 572.

Levshina, N. (2022). Corpus-based typology: Applications, challenges and some solutions. Linguistic Typology, 26(1), 129-160.

Trends in Papuan Linguistics II
15-17 Feb 2023 Paris (France)

After a successfull first instance in 2019, Current Trends in Papuan Linguistics 2023 aims to again provide a venue for user-friendly exchange of research findings and for review of research directions in Papuan linguistics today. A subsidiary aim is to inform and motivate students and researchers who are considering starting research on Papuan languages.

There are upwards of 800 Papuan languages spoken on and around the island of New Guinea. Papuan languages do not form a genealogical unit, but rather comprise between 20 to 40 distinct families. A language is said to be Papuan, if it is spoken on or near New Guinea, and is not Austronesian or Australian. The proportion of unknown or poorly documented Papuan languages is still one of the highest in the world. Due to the huge number of Papuan languages and the unprecedented speed of their decline in recent decades, much of the effort of linguists in the area has been focussed on the documentation and description of individual languages or small groups of languages. Great strides have been made in their documentation and these descriptive improvements have, in turn, allowed many new studies into different aspects of Papuan languages.

This colloquium will focus on taking stock of the latest research into Papuan languages, discuss what has been achieved, and what the focus of future research would be. We will bring together researchers working on Papuan languages from different sub-fields of linguistics, including, but not limited to, linguistic anthropology, language acquisition, historical linguistics, language description and documentation, contribution to theoretical linguistic, sociolinguistic or typological syntheses, data aggregation and management, etc. The colloquium will also welcome contributions on the wider Melanesian Linguistic Area, dealing with such issues as Papuan language contact with and shift to Austronesian languages.
We invite submissions on any topic relating to Papuan languages, including contact phenomena between Papuan and Austronesian languages.

Abstracts should be of between 300 and 500 words.
Please email abstracts to sylvain.loiseau(at)univ-paris13.fr and sonja.riesberg(at)cnrs.fr by 15 December 2022.

Organisation : Sylvain Loiseau (Université Paris 13 / UMR 7107 Lacito, Sonja Riesberg (CNRS / UMR 7107 Lacito) and Moises Velasquez Perez (UMR 7107 Lacito).

ctpl2023.sciencesconf.org

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