Patrick Rebuschat

Professor of Linguistics and Cognitive Science

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Lisbon symposium on heritage language learning and education

Heritage language learning and education: Cross-disciplinary perspectives

Faculdade de Letras, University of Lisbon, December 18, 2017

Greatly enjoyed participating at the inaugural event of the new Heritage Language Consortium at my alma mater. The symposium provided a snapshot of the exciting work conducted by some of our members in the domain of heritage and second language learning. Nice range of approaches (experimental, computational, and corpus-based), all of them essential to move forward our understanding of heritage language learning. And particularly pleased that we share the same mission: Understand the fundamentals of language and language learning, then apply this to boost educational effectiveness and improve language education.

Thanks again to Ana Lúcia Santos for organizing and to CLUL for hosting us. You can download the program, including abstracts, by clicking on this link.

 

 

Heritage Language Consortium: Website now online!

Thrilled to announce that the website of our new Heritage Language Consortium is now online.

The Heritage Language Consortium, is a strategic partnership between Lancaster University, the University of Lisbon, the University of Minho, NOVA University Lisbon, the University of Porto, Tübingen University, and Camões: Instituto da Cooperação e da Língua, Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Very honored to serve as Director of this important initiative, and very grateful to colleagues in Braga, Lancaster, Lisbon, Porto and Tuebingen for their help in getting this off the ground.

Please click on this link to learn more about the Consortium: http://www.lancaster.ac.uk/heritage-language/

The launch is set for December 19, when our Memorandum of Understanding is signed during an official cerimony in Lisbon. On the day before, the University of Lisbon (my alma mater…) will organize a symposium to celebrate the occasion (click here for program). Thanks to Ana Lúcia Santos and CLUL for hosting us.

Interested in studying abroad at one of our partner universities in 2018-2019?

Interested in studying abroad at one of our partner universities in 2018-2019?

Here are the important steps:

1. Register your interest in the Study Abroad opportunity by clicking on the link below and filling in the form:

https://lancaster.moveon4.com/form/5a004d2a3f5d66f254f0e684/eng

2. Read these important slides (click: initial Briefing 2018-19 final), provided by the International Office.

3. Attend the appropriate briefing sessions, offered by the International Office.

The schedule is below. For questions regarding the briefings, please email globalexperiences@lancaster.ac.uk.

Dates of the Global Experiences Briefing sessions
22nd November 2017 Boston/New York Trip Briefing Presentation + Q&A Bowland Main Lecture Theatre 1pm – 2pm
29th November 2017 Which Uni is right for me and funding Study Abroad Faraday Lecture Theatre 1pm – 2pm
6th December 2017 Applying for a Study Abroad place Elizabeth Livingston Lecture Theatre 1pm – 2pm
13th December 2017 Agreements and Applications Bowland Main Lecture Theatre 1pm – 2pm
17th January 2018 Explaining Financial Guaruntees Faraday Lecture Theatre 1pm – 2pm
24th January 2018 Course Matching Faraday Lecture Theatre 1pm – 2pm
31st January 2018 USA Visa Briefing Session Frankland Lecture Theatre 1pm – 2pm
14th March 2018 Before you go and when you arrive Frankland Lecture Theatre 1pm – 2pm
25th April 2018 How Studying Abroad makes you employable Frankland Lecture Theatre 1pm – 2pm
2nd May 2018 Fees and Finance Briefing Session Faraday Lecture Theatre 1pm – 2pm
9th May 2018 Pre-departure & Cultural Transition Briefing Session Faraday Lecture Theatre 1pm – 2pm

4. Submit your application before the deadline.

The applications are handled by our colleagues in the International Office. After you submit your application, this will be sent to the Departmetn for review. You should know whether you have been allocated a place in January.

AMLaP: Registration deadline August 7

Final registration deadline for AMLAP 2017 has been extended until 7th August 2017, but may close earlier if we reach our limit on numbers. Very last few places are still available for the conference dinner.

Registration information is here:

Registration

The provisional programme for AMLAP 2017 is here:

Programme

See elsewhere on the amlap2017 website for more information on travel.

We are afraid that, due to the popularity of the meeting and limits on numbers (and lack of local funding support…!), local people will need to register to attend the conference.

Padraic Monaghan, Patrick Rebuschat, Francesca Citron

Impressions from Michael Ullman’s visit

It was great to catch up with former Georgetown colleague Michael Ullman yesterday. Michael gave an excellent talk on language, memory and the brain, which was co-organized by Padraic Monaghan (Psychology) and myself (Linguistics). The turn-out from Linguistics and Psychology staff and students was impressive, and we ended up having to find a signifcantly larger venue. This was followed by a very productive data session and a well-earned dinner at a local pub.

Thanks again to Michael for joining us for the day and for sharing his expertise!

  

Outstanding Contribution Award

Very happy to have received Lancaster University’s Outstanding Contribution Award. The Outstanding Contribution Awards officially recognize “performance and behaviour that is excellent, innovative, and engaging, that transcends normal expectations for a role.” In my case, the award recognizes my work in the area of internationalization.

Great time at the staff award dinner and at the Pendle graduation cerimony, presided by Lancaster University’s Chancellor, The Rt Hon. Alan Milburn.

Presentation slides from today’s IASCL presentation

Just uploaded our slides from today’s presentation on “Age effects in statistical learning of Japanese: Evidence from the cross-situational learning paradigm”. In this study, we investigated cross-situational learning of Japanese words and syntax in children and adolescents. It suggests ages 11-12 as a “sweet spot” for statistical language learning.

Click here to download slides.

Feedback very welcome!

Michael Ullman (Georgetown): Invited talk on July 24

We are very pleased to announce that Michael Ullman will be visiting Lancaster University to give a talk on language, memory and the brain. Abstract, location and short bio are provided below. This is a unique opportunity for staff and students to engage with a world-leading cognitive neuroscientist, who is particularly renowned for his extensive work on the neural basis of first and second language acquisition and processing. (And for me it’s a great opportunity to catch up with Michael, a former colleague from my three years at Georgetown University.)

The event is co-organized by Linguistics and Psychology. Please contact Padraic Monaghan p.monaghan@lancaster.ac.uk, or myself,  p.rebuschat@lancaster.ac.uk, for more information on Michael’s schedule, or if you’d like to join us for lunch.

Professor Michael T. Ullman
Departments of Neuroscience, Linguistics, Psychology and Neurology, Georgetown University, Washington, DC

11am Monday 24th July 2017
C89 County South, Lancaster University

Language, memory, and brain: Learning and memory brain systems in first and second language

Increasing evidence suggests that language learning, knowledge, and use crucially depend on two learning and memory systems in the brain: declarative memory and procedural memory. These systems, which also exist in other vertebrate species, appear to have been co-opted for language – whether or not they subsequently became further specialized for this domain, either evolutionarily or developmentally.

Because the behavioral, anatomical, physiological, molecular and genetic correlates of these two systems are quite well-studied in animals and humans, they lead to numerous specific predictions about language that would not likely be made in the more circumscribed study of language alone. This approach is thus very powerful in being able to generate a wide range of novel predictions for language – including for first and second language, in various healthy and disordered populations.

In the talk I will first provide some background on the two memory systems, and then discuss the manner in which language is predicted to depend on them. One of the key concepts is that to some extent the two systems can underlie the same functions (e.g., for navigation, grammar, etc.), and thus they play at least partly redundant roles for these functions. This has important consequences for first and second language, as well as for language disorders.

Following the background, I will present multidisciplinary evidence (behavioral, neurological, neuroimaging, electrophysiological) that basic aspects of language do indeed depend on the two memory systems, though in somewhat different ways across different populations. I will discuss normal first and second language, individual and group differences (e.g., sex differences), and language in disorders, focusing on neurodevelopmental disorders, especially Specific Language Impairment.

Ullman Bio:
Dr. Ullman is Professor in the Department of Neuroscience at Georgetown University, with secondary appointments in the Departments of Neurology, Linguistics and Psychology. He is Director of the Brain and Language Laboratory and the Georgetown EEG/ERP Lab. His research examines the brain bases of first and second language, how language and memory are affected in various disorders (e.g., autism, dyslexia, Specific Language Impairment, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and Huntington’s diseases), and how factors such as sex, handedness, and genetic variability affect the brain bases of language and memory.

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