Call for Papers
There is ever-growing evidence of a direct influence of central processing stages on the peripheral stages in language production across modalities. In other words, structural properties directly modulate the linguistic output, which mostly surfaces as variation in the output signal. Although processing stages are generally regarded as highly integrated, the mere existence of such direct influence challenges most traditional theoretical approaches, according to which central processing would be complete before the initiation of peripheral production processes, such as articulation for speaking or hand movements for both writing and signing.
For the spoken modality, we find traces of semantic transparency, morphological status, or syntactic environment in the acoustic signal (e.g., Schmitz et al. 2021). Similarly, written and signed language production have been shown to be susceptible to sublexical differences (e.g., Börstell et al. 2024; Muschalik et al. 2024). It seems there are striking parallels between the modalities, yet findings are still mostly discussed modality-specific and independently of one another. We argue that the traces of central processing we find in the cross-modal periphery can be used to shed further light on more general patterns in language processing and the intricate interplay between language modalities.
This workshop aims at taking a cross-modal perspective, highlighting similarities and differences between existing modality-specific findings, to discuss language production as a modality-spanning cognitive process. The workshop invites researchers with different areas of complementary expertise, ranging from spoken and written to signed language processing. Contributions that may build bridges between modalities and invite cross-modal comparison are particularly welcome.
Börstell, C., Schembri, A. C., & Crasborn, O. (2024). Sign duration and signing rate in British Sign Language, Dutch Sign Language and Swedish Sign Language. Glossa Psycholinguistics, 3(1), https://doi.org/10.5070/G60111915
Muschalik, J., Schmitz, D., Kakolu Ramarao, A., Baer-Henney, D. (2024). Typing /s/—morphology between the keys? Reading and Writing. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11145-024-10586-9
Schmitz, D., Baer-Henney, D., & Plag, I. (2021). The duration of word-final /s/ differs across morphological categories in English: Evidence from pseudowords. Phonetica, 78(5–6), 571–616. https://doi.org/10.1515/phon-2021-2013
Submission guidelines
Abstracts should be no longer than one page, with references and any additional material permitted on a second page. Submissions must be formatted for A4 paper with 1-inch margins on all sides and set in Times New Roman, at a minimum font size of 11 points. References should follow either APA style or the Unified Stylesheet for Linguistics. Abstracts must be fully anonymised and submitted as a single PDF file. While the working language of both abstracts and the workshop is English, research on any language is welcome.
Each author may be the first author of at most one abstract and may be listed as a co-author on up to two additional abstracts. Please note that at DGfS conferences, speakers are not allowed to present their work at multiple workshops (but they may be listed as co-authors of talks in other workshops).
Please use our EasyAbs page for submitting your abstract. EasyAbs is a free service offered by the LINGUIST List.