(Apologies for cross-posting)
Workshop Complexity in Language Sciences
December 12-13, 2024
Paris, France
Submissions deadline : September 9, 2024

=========

While speaking, writing, listening and reading are easy, simple, and natural 
activities for those who practice them on a daily basis, what can be said about 
the cognitive and linguistic processes that underlie them? What about the 
languages in which these activities are practiced, and the theories and models 
developed to explain and represent the mechanisms involved? And finally, what 
can be said about individuals (speakers, listeners, writers, readers) who have 
not yet finished the learning process of these activities (children in the 
language acquisition phase, adults learning a second language), especially 
given that certain processes that may prove particularly difficult or even 
impossible (e.g.: writing in deaf people)?
The question of complexity quickly arises, and the notion is regularly invoked 
in the language sciences, though often in a vague and intuition-driven way. In 
practice, this question takes on different forms depending on who is 
formulating it (psycholinguists, linguists, descriptive or model scientists, 
etc.) and who is targeted by it (speakers, listeners, natives, non-natives, 
learners, atypical subjects, etc.). In short, how complex, for whom and why? Is 
it necessary or contingent complexity? To answer these questions, we need to 
know what kind of complexity we're talking about: conceptual (e.g. 
representation of time and reference in languages), formal (e.g. at the 
phonological, graphic, morphological and syntactic level) or physiological 
(unnatural articulatory gestures, material constraints)? Does one complexity 
call for another (e.g. does the complex conception of time in a language call 
for a complex syntax, does formal complexity imply cognitive complexity and 
vice versa?).

The aim of this conference is to discuss the current state of the art on 
complexity in the language sciences. It will offer the opportunity to examine 
the history and use of the notion of complexity in linguistics, through a 
variety of theoretical and epistemological perspectives. Its ambition is to 
bring together linguists working on spoken and written language, NLP/computer 
scientists and psycholinguists, etc., to discuss the complexity that runs, to 
varying degrees, through the different components of language and discourse 
(segmental, suprasegmental, morphological, syntactic, semantic, pragmatic). The 
expected result is to elaborate a concept that will work for the community, 
however stratified it may be, since the criteria on which it is based are 
obviously many:
•       For the linguist, complexity is that which is not simple to represent 
and model, because (i) it is not easily predictable (e.g. unexpected 
constructions, productions that escape general rules), (ii) it could be of a 
continuous nature, and therefore difficult to isolate or categorize (e.g. the 
prosodic level of representation as opposed to the segmental level; opaque or 
indefinite reference)[1]. A complex element is also an observable that can be 
described but which resists explanation (e.g. errors in deaf writing).
•       For the human subject, everything that is unnatural and therefore 
difficult to produce or to hear (such as a foreign language) can be considered 
as complex. Complexity can also refer to units which are linguistically 
underspecified, and thus ambiguous or implicit, entailing a high cognitive load.

While human subjects or linguists might view complexity as an obstacle to 
learning or a challenge in representing language, complexity is conversely 
necessary to the very existence of natural languages and their uses. From a 
synchronic point of view, complexity plays a part in regulating the linguistic 
system, the internal balance of a language, based on a partition between 
complex and simple elements (e.g. poor morphology vs. complex tonal system in 
Chinese). What remains to be understood is how this balance is determined in 
languages. From a diachronic point of view, complexity seems to play the same 
role, whether it's a question of simplifying certain processes and maintaining 
the formal economy of the system (e.g. deletion of phonological oppositions 
with low functional output, grammaticalization processes), or, on the contrary, 
reintegrating complexity (e.g. the transition from pidgin to creole).
This raises a question for the language sciences: how can we account for 
linguistic complexity? Which approach would be most adequate: typological and 
contrastive, or internal, experimental, or inductive on large corpora? How 
should complexity be measured, and what measurement standard should be 
proposed? Which scale and which descriptors should be used? For example, can we 
assume the existence of a neutral SVO sentence in order to work on complex 
structures in syntax? Can the concepts of transformation and movement proposed 
by generative grammar be used to work on syntactic complexity? If so, how? If 
not, what descriptors should be used to replace them: "easily" quantifiable 
descriptors (cf. work on text readability or simplification, which 
systematically use them), such as sentence length or the types of dependency 
between elements (e.g. number, length, direction)? The question of medium sheds 
a different light on complexity, particularly with regards to the syntactic 
component. Is the syntactic structure of a message more complex in spoken or 
written form? And from what point of view? In production or reception? From the 
point of view of language activity or from the point of view of linguistic 
representation and modeling? 
In semantics and pragmatics, how can we deal with the meaning-form 
relationship? How can we deal with ambiguity and implicitness? Can a text be 
simple, given that it contains a set of units and constructions that are 
themselves complex. If so, what mechanism of adjustment or qualitative change 
are necessary? In text linguistics, the notion of complexity has been seen in 
various ways; for example, through the study of the textualization process 
itself; through the measurement and quantification of writers' pauses or 
revisions; by the methods used in applied linguistics to simplify texts, too 
difficult to be understood and needing to be adapted for a particular audience.
Finally, there's a central question in modeling: how does one manage the 
complexity of the object that is to be represented? How does one break down a 
complex object into simple elements without losing information? How can we 
understand which properties are necessary and sufficient to represent the 
system's operation? How can we approach the question of how multiple 
descriptors relate to each other using mathematical formulas that go further 
than the formulas proposed in the field of readability? Among the descriptors, 
one could for example be interested in units or dependency relations in syntax, 
in contours or tones in languages with accentual prosody, in operations 
underlying the description of the semantics of lexical and grammatical units 
(e.g. deictic operation), in referencing operations to different spaces of 
validation of predicative contents (e.g. hypothetic spaces), or even in 
different types of relations between textual units (e.g. embedding, inclusion, 
successivity). From the point of view of skill acquisition, a point of interest 
can be the way we can correlate linguistic structures and the stages of an 
individual's cognitive development.

Important dates:
September 9, 2024 – abstract submissions
October 15, 2024 - scientific committee decision
December 12-13, 2024 - Workshop

Submission instructions:
Abstracts, written in French or English, are due on September 9 at the latest:
- 1 cover page including the name and affiliation of the author(s) ;
- 1-2 pages of text (excluding references);
- 3 to 5 keywords.

They should be sent to MAIL to:
Delphine Battistelli, Modyco, Paris Nanterre : 
[email protected]
Georgeta Cislaru, Modyco, Paris Nanterre : [email protected] 
Sascha Diwersy, Praxiling, Paul Valéry Montpellier : 
[email protected]
Anne Lacheret, Modyco, Paris Nanterre : [email protected]
Dominique Legallois, Lattice, Sorbonne Nouvelle : 
[email protected]

Scientific Committee:
Basso Pierluigi, Université Lumière Lyon 2
Blache Philippe CNRS, ILCB, Laboratoire Parole & Langage, Université Aix 
Marseille 
Blumenthal-Dramé Alice, Freiburg Institute for Advanced Studies
Brunetti Lisa, LLF, Université Paris Cité
Feltgen Quentin, Université de Gand
François Thomas, Cental, UCLouvain 
Gala Núria, LPL, Aix Marseille Université. 
Grandjean Didier, Swiss Center for Affective Sciences, Université de Genève
Heidlmayr Karin, MoDyCo, CNRS-Université Paris Nanterre
Kahane Sylvain, MoDyCo, CNRS-Université Paris Nanterre
Lampitelli Nicola, MoDyCo, CNRS-Université Paris Nanterre
Landragin Frédéric, Lattice, CNRS 
Nadvornikova Olga, Université Charles, Prague 
Olive Thierry, CeRCA, CNRS – Université de Poitiers
Prévost Sophie, Lattice, CNRS
Watine Marie-Albane, BCL, Université Côte d’Azur 
Ziegler Johannes, Centre de Recherche en Psychologie et Neuroscience (CRPN) 
CNRS et Université Aix Marseille.

Selected References
Barbaresi, Adrien. 2011. La complexité linguistique, méthode d’analyse. TALN 
Jun 2011, Montpellier, France. pp.229-234.
Berthoz, Alain. 2009. La Simplexité, Paris, Odile Jacob.
Bottineau, Didier. 2015. Les langues naturelles, objets complexes, systèmes 
simplexes : le cas du basque. In Begioni et Placella (dir.), Problématiques de 
langues romanes, Linguistique, politique des langues, didactique, culture, 
Hommages à Alvaro Rocchetti, Linguistica 69, Fasano, Schena Editore, pp. 55-85.
Dahl, Östen. 2004. The Growth and Maintenance of Linguistic Complexity. 
Amsterdam/Philadelphia, Benjamins.
Do-Hurinville, Danh-Thành, Dao, Huy-Linh (dir.). 2017. La complexité et la 
comparaison des langues, ÉLA. Études de linguistique appliquée, n°185.
Ehret, Katharina, Berdicevskis, Aleksandrs, Bentz, Christian, and 
Blumenthal-Dramé, Alice. 2023. Measuring language complexity: challenges and 
opportunities. Linguistics Vanguard, vol. 9, no. s1, pp. 1-8. 
https://doi.org/10.1515/lingvan-2022-0133 
Ellis, Nick C. & Diane Larsen-Freeman (eds). 2009. Language as a Complex 
Adaptive System. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
Glaudert, Nathalie. 2011. La complexité linguistique : essai de théorisation et 
d’application dans un cadre comparatiste, Université de la Réunion.
Housen, Alex, Kuiken, Folkert, and Vedder, Ineke. (Eds.). 2012. Dimensions of 
L2 Performance and Proficiency: Complexity, Accuracy and Fluency in SLA. 
Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins.
Laplantine, Chloé, Joseph, John E., and Aussant, Émilie (dir.) 2023. Simplicité 
et complexité des langues dans l’histoire des théories linguistiques. Paris : 
SHESL (HEL Livres, 3).
Larsen-Freeman, Diane, & Cameron, Lynne. 2008. Complex Systems and 
AppliedLlinguistics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Lund, Kristine, Basso Fossali, Pierluigi, Mazur, Audrey & Ollagnier-Beldame, 
Magali (eds.). 2022. Language is a Complex Adaptive System: Explorations and 
evidence (Conceptual Foundations of Language Science 8). Berlin: Language 
Science Press.
Martinot, Claire, Bosnjak Botica, Tomislava, Gerolimich, Sonia, and 
Paprocka-Piotrowska, Urszula (eds.) 2019. Reformulation and Acquisition of 
Linguistic Complexity. Crosslinguistic perspective. London: ISTE & Wiley.
Sampson, Geoffrey, Gil, David, Trudgill, Peter (dir.). 2009. Language 
Complexity as an Evolving Variable, Oxford Linguistics.
Trudgill, Peter. 2001. Contact and simplification: Historical baggage and 
directionality in linguistic change. Language Typology, 5, 371–37.
_______________________________________________
Corpora mailing list -- [email protected]
https://list.elra.info/mailman3/postorius/lists/corpora.list.elra.info/
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]

Reply via email to