*Job openings: PhD studentship in Formal Linguistics*Duration : 36 months
Beginning : Fall 2023 (ideally October 2023)
Place : ATILF, From syntax to discourse axis (Nancy) and Laboratoire de
Linguistique Formelle (Paris)
Salary (net) : approx. 1750 euros per month

*Thesis supervisors* : Mathilde Dargnat (Université de Lorraine and
ATILF-CNRS, http://mathilde.dargnat.free.fr/), Jonathan Ginzburg
(Labratoire de Linguistique Formelle, Université Paris-Cité,
https://sites.google.com/site/jonathanginzburgswebsite/home)

*Prerequisites : *
Ÿ  —Masters in Linguistics, Cognitive Science, or NLP.
Ÿ  —Excellent command of French.
Ÿ  —A solid background in formal or/and computational semantics would be
advantageous.

*To Apply: *

   1.                CV of at most 2 pages,
   2.                Transcripts for Masters  and BSc/BA degrees
   3.            A letter of motivation .
   4.            The Masters thesis  (or a draft thereof) and/or
   any         submitted/accepted publications
   5.            Contact details for  one or two referees.

 Ÿ  Applications should  be sent to: mathilde.dargnat at univ-lorraine.fr
<mathilde.darg...@univ-lorraine.fr>and yonatan.ginzburg at u-paris.fr
<yonatan.ginzb...@u-paris.fr>

Ÿ  Deadline: *25 June, 2023*



Ÿ

*CODIM project short description*
https://www.codim-project.org/

The CODIM project is funded by the A(gence) N(ationale) de la R(echerche).
It focuses on two important linguistic resources  that contribute to
structuring monologues or conversations in human languages : D(iscourse)
M(arkers) (therefore/donc,  well/ben,bon etc. in English/French) and
prosody (in particular, intonation). It will evaluate their status with
respect to two major views on how complex meanings emerge: compositionality
(the possibility of combining meaningful expressions into more complex
meaningful expressions) and pattern- or construction-based approaches (the
idea that language users exploit partly ‘frozen’ strings of words). We will
compare the semantic and prosodic properties of simple and complex French
DM (e.g. ah + bon) found in corpora for written and spoken French, using a
variety of technical tools for DM identification (category-driven text
mining), clustering (statistics and Machine Learning) and research in
formal semantics and prosody (duration and intensity measures, contour
representation). The project aims at fostering collaboration between
linguists and computer scientists.


Dissertation Topic: French discourse markers and compositionality

The dissertation will focus on providing a semantic and pragmatic
characterization of  a class of DM combinations. This involves issues
including the following:
1. When the DMs are in a markedly frequent combination and are intuitively
close, accounting for the fact that their combination is not perceived to
be redundant
(e.g., donc du coup, alors donc, mais pourtant, mais quand même, et alors,
donc voilà,).
2. When the DMs are intuitively quite distinctive, are they just
complementary, which suggests that they introduce unconnected discourse
relations/speaker manifestations?  Or is another type of analysis needed?
3. Is the combination compositional? Addressing this question requires
discussing and possibly elaborating on existing compositional techniques.
For instance,  current formal approaches in semantics are functional in an
elementary mathematical sense: functions apply to arguments (which can
themselves be functions) to deliver ‘interpretations’. Can one reduce the
observed combinations to this type of mechanism? Also, in cases where such
a reduction is possible, to what extent can it predict or motivate the
strength of association between the DMs which cluster into the combination?
Why is this particular association more frequent than others? Does it
correspond, for example, to specific discourse moves which play a prominent
role in interactions?
4. Are there cases of repulsion (DMs which do not occur together)? How come?


Selected References

Cooper, R. From Perception to Communication: A Theory of Types for Action
and Meaning.
Oxford University Press, 2023.
Couper-Kuhlen, E. & Kortmann, B. (Eds.). 2000.
Cause-Condition-Concession-Contrast. Cognitive and Discourse Perspectives.
Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.
Crible,  L. & Degand, L. 2019. Domains and Functions : A Two-Dimensional
Account of Discourse Markers. Discours 24 (online), 35 p.
Crible, L. & Degand, L. 2021. Co-occurrence and ordering of discourse
markers in sequences: A multifactorial study in spoken French. Journal of
Pragmatics 177, 18-28.
Dargnat, M. 2020. Subjectivité et projection : le cas des particules
discursives. In Actes du 7e Congrès Mondial de Linguistique Française,
Montpellier, SHS Web of Conference 778, IDP Sciences.
Dargnat, M. 2022. “Mais enfin”: construction et association. Langages 225,
49-63.
Degand, L., Cornillie, B. & P. Pietrandrea (Eds.). 2013. Discourse Markers
and Modal Particles. Categorization and Description. Amsterdam: Benjamins.
Dostie G. 2004. Pragmaticalisation et marqueurs discursifs. Analyse
sémantique et traitement lexicographique. Liège : De Boeck/Duculot.
Ginzburg, J. (2012). The Interactive Stance. Meaning for Conversation.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Tian, Y. & Ginzburg, J. 2016. No I am: What are you saying “no” to? In
Proceedings of Sinn und Bedeutung 21, 1241-1252.
Haselow, A. 2019. Discourse marker sequences: Insights into the serial
order of communicative tasks in real-time turn production. Journal of
Pragmatics 146, 1-18.
Haselow, A. & S. Hancil (Eds.). 2021. Studies at the Grammar-Discourse
Interface. Discourse markers and discourse-related grammatical phenomena.
Amsterdam: Benjamins.
Heine, B., Kaltenböck, G., Kuteva, T. & H. Long (Eds.). 2021. The Rise of
Discourse Markers. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Mosegaard Hansen, M.-B. 1998. The Function of Discourse Particles.
Amsterdam: Benjamins.
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