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Colloquium by Bronwyn Bjorkman (21. February)

Our first CASTL colloquium of the year will take place on Friday, February 21 at 14:15 in SVHUM E-0103.   Bronwyn Bjorkman from Queen’s University in Toronto will give a talk entitled Realizing Syntax.  The abstract of her talk is reproduced below.   Abstract This talk looks at interactions among linearization, prosody, and vocabulary insertion, focusing Read More

Spring FishFeed 2020

A more or less finalised version of the FishFeed Schedule for this term has been uploaded! Check the FishFeed link for further information. We meet on (most) Fridays at 12.15 in room B1004.  All are welcome! 

EEG Reading Group-Spring 2020

When? Wednesdays at 12.15 Where? Hus 1 1.217 What next? January 29th, we will be discussing the following readings: Donchin, E. (1979). Event-related brain potentials: A tool in the study of human information processing. In H. Begleiter (Ed.), Evoked Brain Potentials and Behavior (pp. 13–88). New York: Plenum Press. Donchin, E. (1981). Surprise! … Surprise? Read More

New FRI PRO Grant to Fish Affiliated Project

Congratulations to Björn Lundquist on his new Norwegian Research Council Grant Experimental Approaches to Syntactic Optionality !!  Ten million kroner over three years.  Bravo!  

CASTLFish at the Verona Winter School

CASTLFish had a strong showing at the 3rd Winter School in Linguistics (18-27 November 2019) organised by the University of Verona in collaboration with the Free University of Bozen-Bolzano and UIT. Together with Birgit Alber, Martin Krämer remotely taught 2 of the courses provided: an introductory and an advanced course in Phonology. Their PhD students, Joachim Kokkelmans Read More

Colloquium Andrew Murphy (22. November)

Join us on Friday, November 22nd to hear Andrew Murphy from the University of Leipzig talk about the “Left-Branch Extraction and Remnant Movement.”   The colloquium will be held at 14.15 in SVHUM E-0105. A short abstract of the talk is provided below.      Left-Branch Extraction and Remnant Movement Since Ross (1967), the analysis of Read More