Chan – Tone coarticulation and implications for forensic speaker comparison

The Lancaster University Phonetics Lab and FORGE are delighted to announce a joint talk by our upcoming internal speaker: Dr Ricky Chan (Linguistics & English Language). Details of his talk are below:

TITLE
Tone coarticulation and implications for forensic speaker comparison

ABSTRACT
A major goal in forensic speaker comparison research is to identify variables in speech that are useful for characterising speakers. While research on individual phonetic parameters abound, few studies have focused on the between-speaker differences in sounds under the influence from connected speech processes, let alone with an explicit comparison with sounds produced in their citation forms. In this talk, I will report an experiment on the speaker-discriminatory powers of lexical tones under different speaking rate and tonal contexts, which are two main factors contributing to tone coarticulation. 20 native Cantonese speakers and 20 native Mandarin speakers were recruited and read speech in two speaking rates (normal vs. fast) and two tonal contexts (compatible vs. conflicting) were elicited. Results based on discriminant analysis show that coarticulated tones tend to perform worse in speaker identification than tones in their citation forms. Implications for forensic speaker comparison will be discussed.

TIME & PLACE
1200-1300, Mon 21st Nov, County South C89

All are welcome to attend.

DisTex talk: Fuoli – Analyzing corporate trust-repair discourse using corpus and experimental techniques

FORGErs may be interested in the inaugural meeting of the DisTex research group. Their first speaker will be Matteo Fuoli (Lund University). Details of his paper are below:

Title
Analyzing corporate trust-repair discourse using corpus and experimental techniques

Abstract
Trust is a valuable relational asset for companies, and an important precondition for their legitimacy. But trust is also a fragile commodity; it takes a long time to build, and just moments to destroy. In this talk, I will present the results of two studies that investigate how companies use discourse strategically in order to restore public trust in them after episodes of wrongdoing. In the first study, I combine Appraisal theory (Martin and White, 2005) and manual corpus annotation techniques to examine the trust-repair discourse strategies deployed by BP’s CEO in his letters to shareholders after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill of 2010. In the second study, I use experimental methods to test the perlocutionary effects of two basic strategies that are commonly used by corporations in situations where trust is at stake: apology and denial. These two studies offer new insights into the discursive dynamics of trust, and demonstrate the usefulness of mixing corpus and experimental methods for the analysis of discourse.

Time & place
1600, Mon 24th Oct, County South B89

All are welcome to attend.

Anderson – Forensic linguistics in practice

The FORGE is delighted to announce our first external guest speaker: Holly Anderson. Details of her talk are below:

TITLE
Forensic linguistics in practice

NOTES
This will be of especial interest to those looking to go into a career in forensic linguistics, however please note the following two points:

This talk contains content that audience members may find disturbing, upsetting, and/or otherwise offensive. This talk is not suitable for anyone under the age of sixteen.This talk will involve language and images that some may find disturbing and/or offensive. This talk is not suitable for anyone under the age of sixteen.

Strictly no photographs, recording, or live-broadcasting (e.g. via Twitter) of any kind.Mobile phones and recording technology must be switched off throughout the session. Recording, photographing, or otherwise live-broadcasting (e.g. via Twitter) any part of the talk is strictly forbidden.

TIME & PLACE
1200-1300, Wed 12th Oct, Cavendish Colloquium

Culpeper, Iganski & Sweiry – Linguistic impoliteness and religiously aggravated hate crime in England and Wales

BE AWARE THAT THIS PRESENTATION CONTAINS EXAMPLES OF HIGHLY OFFENSIVE LANGUAGE

The FORGE is pleased to announce our upcoming internal speakers: Prof Jonathan Culpeper (Linguistics & English Language), Prof Paul Iganski (Law), and Dr Abe Sweiry (Law). Details of their talk are below:

TITLE
Linguistic impoliteness and religiously aggravated hate crime in England and Wales

ABSTRACT
Despite its centrality to religiously aggravated hate crime recorded in England and Wales, the nature of the language used has been neglected in research. This paper, based on a unique dataset, aims to rectify this. It takes its approach from the field of linguistic impoliteness, a field that has yet to consider hate crime. Therein lies our second aim: to consider whether impoliteness notions can be usefully extended to the language of hate crime. In our data, we examine, in particular, conventionalized impoliteness formulae, insults, threats, incitement and taboo words. Whilst we reveal some linguistic support for the way religiously aggravated hate crime is framed in the law and discussed in the legal literature, we highlight areas of neglect and potential ambiguity. Regarding impoliteness, we demonstrate its effectiveness as an approach to this data, but we also highlight areas of neglect in that literature too, notably, non-conditional threats and incitement.

TIME & PLACE
1200-1300, Mon 10th Oct, County South C89

All are welcome to attend.

BE AWARE THAT THIS PRESENTATION CONTAINS EXAMPLES OF HIGHLY OFFENSIVE LANGUAGE

Military Linguist: Understanding the Threat

The FORGE is delighted to announce our next external guest speakers of 2016: the Army’s Intelligence Corps and Educational and Training Services (ETS) Branch. Details of this talk are below:

TITLE
Military Linguist: Understanding the Threat

SPEAKERS/GUESTS
WO2 David Thomas, Intelligence Corps Selection Warrant Officer
Capt Christopher Browne ETS (Pool of Linguists)
Sgt Scott Huntley, the Corps Selection Sgt

ABSTRACT
We are pleased to announce that the Army’s Intelligence Corps and Educational and Training Services (ETS) Branch will be joining us on campus to discuss their experiences of being linguists. The roles of linguists in the military are varied, ranging from interpreting and offering cultural insights and explanations, through to analysing intercepted communications and combating the cyber threat.
 
The Army employs people as linguists who have never studied languages before, providing they pass a language aptitude test and the selection process. There are two routes in: the Intelligence Corps, and the Educational and Training Services (ETS) Branch. Our speakers will discuss both full time career options, and the opportunities for part-time employment in the Army Reserve, particularly in the ETS. They will also remain for approximately an hour after the talk itself for one-to-one questions, during which time they will be happy to discuss the opportunities available to work in the Intelligence Corps for non-linguists.
 
In short, this talk will particularly appeal to linguists broadly defined (forensic linguistics, modern languages, EFL/TEFL/TESOL, etc.) but it is likely also to be of interest to anyone who speaks another language besides English fluently, and/or has an interest in language, global peacekeeping, travel, and understanding other cultures.

TIME/PLACE
1000-1100 (talk), 1100-1200 (one-to-one Q&A session), Friday 11th March, Cavendish Colloquium in Faraday Building. (Go through Faraday’s main doors. At the top of the stairs, take a sharp left and go up to the next floor.)

All staff, students, and visitors are welcome to attend.

Anthony & Hardaker – Applications of FireAnt in Forensic (Corpus) Linguistics: Identifying Angels on Ashley Madison

UCREL and the FORGE are delighted to announce a joint talk by Prof Laurence Anthony and Dr Claire Hardaker. Laurence is a Professor in the Faculty of Science and Engineering at Waseda University, Japan, and an Honorary Research Fellow in the Centre for Corpus Approaches to Social Science at Lancaster University. Claire is a Lecturer in Forensic Corpus Linguistics at Lancaster University. Details of their talk are below:

TITLE
Applications of FireAnt in Forensic (Corpus) Linguistics: Identifying Angels on Ashley Madison

ABSTRACT
Ashley Madison (AM) is a website that describes itself as “the most famous name in infidelity and married dating” and uses the tagline “Life is short. Have an affair.” The AM site was created in 2001 by Avid Life Media Inc. (ALM), taking its name from the two most popular girls’ names of the time. ALM’s then-CEO, Noel Biderman, repeatedly supported the philosophy of extra-marital affairs, but unsurprisingly, not everyone agreed with him. In July 2015, an anonymous group calling itself the Impact Team contacted ALM and ordered them to take down AM, as well as an associated site, Established Men. When ALM did not comply, over a series of days in August 2015, the Impact Team released onto the dark net several large data-dumps containing a wide array of information about thirty to forty million AM users, including email addresses, physical addresses, phone numbers, relationship status, physical descriptions, personal habits, and sexual preferences. Within hours of this leak, it became apparent that not all the accounts at AM were operated by humans. Instead, some (known as “Angels” in emails sent between members of the management team) were operated by software. In this presentation, we describe the results of an investigation into the AM Angel accounts and discuss ways in which we can establish their differences from ordinary user accounts. To conduct the investigation, we used a newly developed freeware tool called FireAnt that enabled us to easily extract relevant data from the AM data sources, visualize that data in the form of time-series plots, network graphs, and geolocation maps, and export data for further analysis using traditional corpus tools. As part of the presentation, we will introduce the FireAnt tool and show how it can be used to conduct similar analyses on other datasets.

BIO
Dr. Laurence Anthony is a Professor in the Faculty of Science and Engineering at Waseda University, Japan. He is a former director of the Center for English Language Education (CELESE) and is the coordinator of the CELESE technical English program. He received the M.A. degree in TESL/TEFL, and the Ph.D. in Applied Linguistics from the University of Birmingham, UK, and the B.Sc. degree in mathematical physics from the University of Manchester, UK. His research interests include corpus linguistics, educational technology, natural language processing (NLP), and genre analysis.

TIME & PLACE
W20, 1500-1600, Thu 17th Mar, Furness LT2

Hollmann – Verbal deception detection: a view from linguistic theory

The FORGE is pleased to announce our upcoming internal speaker: Dr Willem Hollmann (Linguistics & English Language). Details of his talk are below:

TITLE
Verbal deception detection: a view from linguistic theory

ABSTRACT
Despite the fact that verbal lie detection is a relatively recent field of inquiry, it already covers a great multitude of approaches. What all these theories have in common is the fact that they were developed by psychologists, with little or no input from linguists. Yet a consideration of the linguistic categories used in many approaches suggests that linguists may in fact be able to contribute. In this talk I will focus on one example: the deception detection method based on word classes proposed by Villar et al. (2013). I will relate their proposals to a range of views on word classes in theoretical linguistics, and point to some implications both for this particular approach to deception detection and for future collaboration in this field more generally between psychologists and linguists.

Villar, Gina, Joanne Arciuli & Helen Paterson. 2013. Linguistic indicators of a false confession. Psychiatry, Psychology and Law 20:504-518.

TIME & PLACE
1500-1600, Tue 23rd Feb, County South B89

All are welcome to attend.

Rashid – The role of language in cybercrime investigation

The FORGE is pleased to announce our upcoming internal speaker: Prof Awais Rashid (Computing & Communications; Security Lancaster). Details of his talk are below:

TITLE
The role of language in cybercrime investigation

ABSTRACT
In this talk I will reflect on experiences in two large-scale projects and discuss the challenges of analysing online activities of cyber criminals. I will then highlight how advances in computational analysis of natural language can help overcome these challenges hence providing a new and powerful tool in the arsenal of cybercrime investigators. Both projects have seen real-world deployments, so the talk will cover both scientific value of linguistic analysis in this context and insights from practical experiences in law enforcement settings.

TIME & PLACE
1500-1600, Tue 02nd Feb, County South B89

Lancaster University staff members and students are welcome to attend.

Jones – ‘Have you swiped your Nectar card?’: Pretextuality and practices of surveillance

The Literacy Research Discussion Group is delighted to announce their external guest speaker: Prof Rodney Jones. Rodney is Professor of Sociolinguistics and Head of Department at the University of Reading. Details of his talk are below:

TITLE
‘Have you swiped your Nectar card?’: Pretextuality and practices of surveillance

ABSTRACT
Pretextuality is a key concept in discourse analysis, through it perhaps has not received the degree of analytical attention that it deserves. It is usually defined as the set of expectations we bring to texts and the situations of which texts are part that help us to understand the purpose of the text and the goals of its author. As Widdowson (2004) argues, ‘All texts are designed to be understood pre-textually…it is the pretextual purpose that we bring to texts that controls how we engage with them and regulate the focus of our attention.’ Whereas Widdowson’s focus is on pretextuality as an interpretive tool, Maryns and Blommaert ( 2002:14) view it more from the perspective of discourse production. For them, pretexts constitute ‘conditions of sayability’: the ‘socially preconditioned meaning assessments, textuality resources and entextualisation potential’ that that allow certain people to say certain things in certain situations. In their analysis of migration stories told by asylum seekers, for example, they show how pretextuality functions to deny discursive resources to particular kinds of people. For ‘social engineers’ (Hagnagy, 2011) and ‘con-men’ involved in things like identity theft, pretextualtiy has a rather different meaning: ‘Pretexting’ is the practice of creating an invented scenario (a pretext) to engage a targeted victim in revealing sensitive information about themselves. While Maryns and Blommaert’s concern with pretextuality focuses on the way it can deny speech to certain individuals, social engineers are more interested in the way it functions to compel speech.

This paper will consider pretexuality in the the context of digital surveillance of the kind regularly engaged in by internet companies (like Facebook and Google), software developers, and retail firms in order to gather consumer data. The question I will be asking is: what are the discursive strategies such entities use to compel users to engage in ‘discourse producing activities’ that result in ‘capta’ (‘captured’ data about users identities, their mundane activities, and their preferences and predilections). The analysis focuses on three ‘case studies’ of ‘pretexting”: 1) online quizzes (such as ‘What Shakespearean character are you?’) of the type often encountered on Facebook; 2) mobile apps which gather information from your smartphone (including your location, your contact list, and your communication with others); and 3) retail loyalty cards such as the ‘Nectar card’ which promise benefits to shoppers who are willing to reveal details about their purchasing behaviour. The analysis will combine all three of the definitions of pretextuality discussed above: Pretextuality as a matter of communicative conventions (or ‘frames), as a function of social power and regimes in inclusion and exclusion, and as an a social practice, an interactional accomplishment dependent on the form and structure of different kinds of ‘conversations’. Understanding pretextuality in the context of digital surveillance, it will argue, requires not just an analysis of of texts and the social contexts in which they occur, but also of the moment by moment unfolding of the social interactions (involving both humans and algorithms) in which texts and contextualization cues are deployed and relationships of power and inequality are constructed.

Hadnagy, C. (2011). Social Engineering: The Art of Human Hacking. Indianapolis, IN: Wiley.

Maryns, K. and Blommaert, J. (2002) Pretextuality and pretextual gaps: On de/refining linguistic inequality, Pragmatics 12 (1)

Widdowson, H. G. (2004). Text, Context, Pretext: Critical Issues in Discourse Analysis. Malden, MA: Blackwell.

BIO
Rodney’s main areas of interest are discourse analysis, interactional sociolinguistics, and language and digital media. He is particularly interested in how digital media affect the way people conduct social interactions and manage social identities. For the past two decades he has been involved with the late Professor Ron Scollon and other colleagues in developing an approach to discourse called mediated discourse analysis, the principles of which are laid out in his 2005 book with Sigrid Norris Discourse in Action: Introducing mediated discourse analysis. He has applied this approach to a range of contexts including health and risk communication, classroom discourse, professional communication, computer mediated communication, and language and creativity. Rodney has authored/edited twelve books and over fifty journal articles and book chapters.

Before joining the University of Reading, Rodney worked in the Department of English at City University of Hong Kong, where he acted as Head of Department from 2012 to 2014. While in Hong Kong he conducted a number of large scale funded research projects having to do with the digital literacies of secondary school students, HIV prevention and education, food labelling, collaborative writing in the creative industries, and laypeople’s communication of scientific and medical information. He is interested in supervising projects on language and (new) media), mediated discourse analysis/nexus analysis, language and gender/sexuality, language and creativity, and health and risk communication.

TIME & PLACE
W13, 1600-1800, Mon 25th Jan, Bownland North Seminar Room 10

Leitner – The metadiscourse of verbal offences in 16th-/17th-century Scottish law courts

The FORGE and the Pragmatics & Stylistics Research Group (PaSty) are delighted to announce our second joint external guest speaker of 2015: Dr Magdalena Leitner. Magdalena is a teaching and research assistant at the University of Zurich. Details of her talk are below:

TITLE
The metadiscourse of verbal offences in 16th-/17th-century Scottish law courts

ABSTRACT
The way people talk about other people’s communicative behaviour in conflicts offers great insights into notions of offensive language use, in the present and in the past (see Bax and Kádár, 2011: 12, Culpeper, 2011: 71-112). This study reconstructs the metadiscourse of verbal offences in 16th-/17th-century Scottish court records, addressing the following questions: which terms were used in lawsuits to judge verbal offences? What do they reveal about period- and context-specific notions of offensive language use? Court records are valuable sources for investigating historical perceptions of verbal offences because everyday conflicts were recorded as legal evidence (see Kytö et al., 2011: 1).

The present investigation contributes to the growing body of historical metadiscourse studies on impoliteness, verbal aggression and related concepts (Archer, 2014, Bös, 2014, McEnery, 2006). It combines Culpeper’s (2011) perception-based concept of impoliteness with qualitative methods and insights from historical pragmatics. Data were drawn from the records of the central criminal court in Edinburgh and from local Scottish church courts between 1560 and 1660 (see Sources below). The Historical Thesaurus of the OED was consulted as a reference point when categorising the collected terms for verbal offences.

Findings suggest that criminal and ecclesiastical courts had mostly distinct vocabularies for judging verbal offences, but shared major semantic concepts, namely breaches of morals and offences against authorities. Both court types had relatively large inventories of evaluative expressions for offensive language use. However, a small set of apparently standard legal terms was predominant, which corresponds to previous observations concerning the formulaic nature of 16th-century Scottish legal discourse (Graham, 1996: 74, Kopaczyk, 2013, Todd, 2002: 19). Surprisingly, church courts did not show a clear preference for judging verbal offences in religious terms. Distribution patterns of verbal offence terms across different trial stages indicate shifts in communicative purposes from less evaluative recording of facts to the highly evaluative tone of courtroom accusations.

BIO
Magdalena Leitner joined the UZH English Department as a Teaching and Research Assistant in October 2014. She completed her PhD on Conflicts in Early Modern Scottish Letters and Law Courts in May 2015. Her doctoral thesis was supervised by Professor Jeremy J. Smith at the University of Glasgow, UK, where she also spent three years before returning to Switzerland. Magdalena holds a Lizenziat degree (i.e. a joint BA & MA) from the University of Zurich in English Linguistics and Literature, Educational Psychology and Film Studies. She wrote her Lizenziatsarbeit (i.e. Masters thesis) on the topic of Thou and You in Late Middle Scottish and Early Modern Northern English Witness Depositions, under the supervision of Professor Dr. Andreas H. Jucker.

TIME & PLACE
W06, 1300-1400, Fri 13th Nov, County South D72