Summer news summary

The summer was lovely but also busy and I didn’t have time to post about all my activities. So here is a short catch up of the highlights.

In June, I attended the 11th Annual Meeting of the International Workshop on Language Production, in Pittsburgh, USA. This fantastic workshop, the only one of its kind, was the first in-person meeting since 2018, since the 2020 meeting had to be cancelled due to Covid. It was a thrill to see friends and colleagues again and to hear such stimulating and interesting talks. While there, I took part in a panel discussion about the job market in the US and Europe, entitled ‘Cross-continental Academic Lifestyle’ and presented some of my work investigating the distinctions beween langauges and dialects. I’m currently writing these findings up for publication, so stay tuned for a pre-print.

In July, I went to Jena, Germany to give a talk to an audience of psychologists and linguists from the University of Jena. My talk, Choose your words wisely: The role of semantic and sociolinguistic features in lexical selection, included some of the findings also shared in the poster above.

Eleanor Heggdal Lønes presents her PhD research at AMLAP conference

Eleanor Heggdal Lønes recently presented some results from her PhD project at the Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing Conference in York, England. Her poster title was ‘Do abstract priming, talker beliefs about the listener, and conceptual pacts all affect lexical choice during cross-dialectal communication?’ Proud supervisors were also in attendance.

You can see the poster here. Below, you can see Eleanor at work!