Author: jillp (page 2 of 2)

Speech Production from a Developmental Perspective by Dr Lisa Redford

The Department of Linguistics and the Graduate Linguists of Oregon Student Society (GLOSS) are pleased to announce that their weekly colloquium will be hosting the talk:

Speech Production from a Developmental Perspective

given by Dr. Lisa Redford (University of Oregon)

Friday, Jan 25 at 3:30pm in Straub 145,

University of Oregon

[embeddoc url=”https://blogs.uoregon.edu/gloss/files/2019/01/012519_Lisa_Redford-x3k44z.pdf” download=”all” viewer=”google” ]

Loanword variation: Patterns, meanings, and apparent roots by Zack Jaggers

The Department of Linguistics and the Graduate Linguists of Oregon Student Society (GLOSS) are pleased to announce that their weekly colloquium will be hosting the talk

Loanword variation:  Patterns, meanings, and apparent roots

given by Dr. Zack Jaggers (University of Oregon)

Friday, Jan 18 at 3:30pm in Straub 145,

University of Oregon

[embeddoc url=”https://blogs.uoregon.edu/gloss/files/2019/01/011819_Zack_Jaggers-1kcfpkm.pdf” download=”all” viewer=”google” ]

Typological universals in diachronic perspective by Dr. Sonia Cristofaro

The Department of Linguistics and the Graduate Linguists of Oregon Student Society (GLOSS) are pleased to announce that their weekly colloquium will be hosting the talk

Typological universals in diachronic perspective

given by Dr. Sonia Cristofaro

Friday, Nov 16 at 3pm in Straub 145,

University of Oregon

[embeddoc url=”https://blogs.uoregon.edu/gloss/files/2018/11/CristofaroF18-1q5hrzr.pdf” download=”all” viewer=”google” ]

‘Rethinking the Typology of Split Ergativity The Patchwork Quilt of Synchronic and Diachronic Syntax’ by Spike Gildea

The Department of Linguistics and the Graduate Linguists of Oregon Student Society (GLOSS) are pleased to announce that their weekly colloquium will be hosting the talk:

Rethinking the Typology of Split Ergativity – The Patchwork Quilt of Synchronic and Diachronic Syntax

given by Dr. Spike Gildea (University of Oregon)

Friday, Nov 9 at 3pm in Straub 145,

University of Oregon

[embeddoc url=”https://blogs.uoregon.edu/gloss/files/2018/11/110918_Spike_Gildea-1912rsv.pdf” download=”all” viewer=”google” ]

‘Clear speech strategies across the lifespan’ by Dr. Valerie Hazan

The Department of Linguistics and the Graduate Linguists of Oregon Student Society (GLOSS) are pleased to announce that their weekly colloquium will be hosting the talk

Clear speech strategies across the lifespan

given by Dr. Valerie Hazan from University College London.

Friday, Nov 2 at 3:30pm in Straub 145,

University of Oregon

 [embeddoc url=”https://blogs.uoregon.edu/gloss/files/2018/10/110218_Valerie_Hazan-2lo98lm.pdf” download=”all” viewer=”google” ]

 

“Towards larger-scale cross-linguistic and cross-variety studies of speech” by Morgan Sonderegger

The Department of Linguistics and the Graduate Linguists of Oregon Student Society (GLOSS) are pleased to announce that their weekly colloquium will be hosting the talk

Towards larger-scale cross-linguistic and cross-variety studies of speech

given by Morgan Sonderegger (McGill University)

Friday, 26th of October, at 3pm in Straub 145,

University of Oregon

[embeddoc url=”https://blogs.uoregon.edu/gloss/files/2018/10/102618_Morgan-Sonderegger-tao4st.pdf” download=”all” viewer=”google” ]

Workshop with Morgan Sonderegger: Topics in fitting and using mixed-effects regression models

GLOSS has organized a workshop on statistical methods with Morgan Sonderegger from McGill University.

This workshop is free to students and faculty— see below for details.
When: Thursday, October 25th, 3:30-6:30 PM
Where: Cascade 202
Title: Topics in fitting and using mixed-effects regression models
Description:
Mixed-effects regression models (MEMs) have become the standard for analyzing linguistic data in several subfields.   However, actually fitting and interpreting these models (in R) carry a number of complications that users often hit in practice, and that are minimally discussed in commonly-used instructional materials on MEMs.  I discuss some of these topics with practical examples and R code, with topics chosen based on a survey circulated before the workshop. Possible topics include: model convergence, random-effect structure, collinearity, post-hoc tests, contrast coding.  Subject to interest I could also give a broad introduction to MEMs using R.

 

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