Annual Report 2008
Transcription
Annual Report 2008
Annual Report 2008 CASTL is a Norwegian Centre of Excellence (CoE). The CoE scheme was initiated by the Research Council of Norway, and the designation in 2002 of 13 Centres of Excellence marked the conclusion of the most farreaching selection process ever to envelop Norwegian research. The process was repeated in 2006, resulting in the creation of eight additional CoEs in 2007. The scheme entails that outstanding research groups, operating under co-ordinated management and research plans, receive long-term funding to engage in world-class frontier research. The CoEs receive annual grants from the Research Council averaging 10 to 20 million NOK for a maximum of ten years, based on host institution pledges to cover a considerable proportion of the CoEs’ expenditures. Moreover, the CoEs are free to seek funding from other sources. The 13 CoEs underwent a midterm evaluation in 2006. Self-evaluations by each Center and its host institution were sent to three international experts for evaluation. The three reports about each CoE were then passed along to a single scientific committee of international experts, which also heard presentations by each Center. They concluded that the CoE scheme has had a positive impact on the standing of Norwegian research internationally. Their unified report on the 13 Centers formed the basis for a decision by the Board of Directors of the Research Council of Norway to extend the original 13 CoEs for an additional 5-year period. The complete report is available at www.rcn.no. 2 Photo: Kristine Nyborg Contents A Word from the Leadership...........................................................................................3 The People.................................................................................................................................4 The Work Nanosyntax – A New Approach to Language................................................8 Space Exploration.......................................................................................................... 10 Verbs at the Syntax-Semantics Interface........................................................ 12 DP-Architecture.............................................................................................................. 14 Revisiting Old Questions in Sound Pattern Research ............................ 15 Saami Language Documentation and (Re)vitalization.......................... 17 The Language Acquisition Group....................................................................... 18 Postdoc & Researcher Projects in 2008............................................................ 20 PhD Projects in 2008.................................................................................................... 21 Study at CASTL.................................................................................................................... 23 PhD Dissertations in 2008.......................................................................................... 24 CASTL Related Projects................................................................................................ 26 The Output............................................................................................................................. 28 The Numbers........................................................................................................................ 30 CASTL Events Conferences – Workshops – Seminars................................ 31 CASTL Guests........................................................................................................................ 34 Greetings from CASTL visitors................................................................................ 35 Front page photo: The characteristic Labyrint at the University of Tromsø. A Word [»w®˘`d|] from the Leadership 2008 was the first year of CASTL’s second 5-year period as a Norwegian Center of Excellence, a year that saw several changes in the team of senior researchers. Ove Lorentz decided to step down as a senior researcher, and CASTL thanks him for his work during the first CoE period. Gillian Ramchand and Bruce Morén-Duolljá joined the team at the beginning of the year, strengthening CASTL's profile in syntax and phonology. In the fall of 2008, CASTL’s Director for the past six years, Curt Rice, was elected Vice Rector for Research and Development at the University of Tromsø. In his new function, Rice will be able to apply many of the lessons learned at CASTL in a larger arena. Organizing a workshop in his honor in December 2008, the CASTL community showed their gratitude to Curt Rice for six years of excellent leadership. Taking over his function as Director of CASTL, Marit Westergaard has joined the team of senior researchers from January 1, 2009. This means that her field of research, language acquisition, has advanced from an affiliated project to a core research area at CASTL. This is reflected already in the annual report for 2008. This annual report also contains much information about the research done at CASTL. On the following pages, the six senior researchers present the core ideas of their projects and the main achievements of the past year. The research carried out by our post-doctoral fellows and other CASTL researchers is also described, as are some CASTL-affiliated projects. Furthermore, we are very proud to present the PhD projects of some of our more advanced students. During 2008, the second CASTL PhD was completed (Sylvia Blaho), as well as a CASTL-affiliated one (Yulia Rodina), and two further PhD dissertations were submitted (one already successfully defend- ed at the beginning of 2009, the other one coming up this spring). 2008 was an exciting year at CASTL, with several activities and events, and many international guests. As usual, the annual report contains quotes from some of them about their experience at CASTL. Highlights of the year were Steven Pinker's visit in March, when he was awarded an honorary doctorate at the University of Tromsø, and a conference on Creole languages in November. The Saami Documentation and Revitalization workshop in February, which was the result of collaboration between CASTL and the Department of Language and Linguistics, was also a great success. The work carried out by the CASTL community has resulted in a number of publications in 2008, and as usual, CASTL people have been especially active at international conferences, presenting the research done in Tromsø to audiences all over the world. Selections of both publications and presentations are provided in this report. As a former CASTL affiliate, the new director has benefited from CASTL's impact on the larger linguistics community at the University of Tromsø for many years, in terms of occasional travel support, funding for the language acquisition lab, and the inspiring atmosphere that CASTL provides. At the same time, the new director also acknowledges that CASTL owes thanks to its many affiliates and the Department of Language and Linguistics for providing a fruitful environment for a Center of Excellence. In the remaining years of the CoE period, we intend to strengthen the good relations to the Department of Language and Linguistics and continue to build an even stronger linguistics community at the University of Tromsø. Tromsø/Oslo, March 2009 Kirsti Koch Christensen Chair of the Board of Directors Curt Rice CASTL Director 2003-2008 Marit Westergaard CASTL Director, 2009- 3 The People [»pHipl˘`] Senior Researchers Professor Curt Rice, Director Phonological theory, OT, metrical theory, comparative Germanic phonology Professor Gillian C. Ramchand Syntax-semantics interface: verbs, event structure, scales, tense, aspect, modality, South Asian languages, Scottish Gaelic Professor Peter Svenonius Syntax, linguistic theory, syntax-semantics interface, morphology, typology, expressions of space and motion, adpositions, categories and features Professor Michal Starke Nanosyntax, architecture of grammar, functional projections, syntax-phonology interface, syntaxconcepts interface, locality and wh-movement, templatic effects, clitics Professor Knut Tarald Taraldsen Syntactic theory, Scandinavian and Romance syntax Senior Researcher Bruce Morén-Duolljá Phonology, feature theory, weight theory, tone theory, phonetics-phonology relations, substancefree, Saami documentation and (re)vitalization Postdoctoral Research Fellows/Researchers 4 Øystein Nilsen Syntax, semantics, lexical categories CASTL Isabelle Roy The syntax-semantics interface CASTL Graduate School Luisa Marti Semantics, pragmatics, indefinites, context dependence The Research Council of Norway Gunnar Hrafn Hrafnbjargarson Case and agreement, expletives, modals, person restrictions, V2, verb movement NORMS Minjeong Son Syntax-(event-)semantics interface, nanosyntax, complex predicates (causatives, resultatives, directed motion and serial verbs), spatial and motion expressions in Korean and Indonesian/Malay YFF project: Moving Right Along Øystein A. Vangsnes Syntax, dialect studies, Nordic languages NORMS The People [»pHipl˘`] Research Fellows (PhD students) Sylvia Blaho Phonological representation, Government Phonology, voicing-related phenomena, syllabic Consonants CASTL Xuan Di Syntactic theory; Mandarin Chinese (Beijing Dialect) Quota student Madeleine Halmøy Arbitrariness, the relationship between formmeaning and interpretation, Norwegian, variation, nominal categories CASTL Marina Pantcheva Nanosyntax of spatial expressions; goal, source and route paths; location CASTL Graduate School Björn Lundquist Syntax, double object constructions and modality. CASTL Monika Bašić Syntax CASTL Graduate School Peter Muriungi General Bantu syntax, the syntax of focus, the syntax of questions CASTL Pavel Caha Nanosyntax, case, adpositions, templates, spell out, Slavic (esp. Czech) CASTL Graduate School Kaori Takamine Syntax, Japanese, hierarchy of prepositions CASTL Marleen Susanne van de Vate Diachronic Study of the Tense, Aspect and Modality system in Saámaka CASTL Graduate School Yulia Rodina Morphology, Grammatical gender, First Language Acquisition Quota student Islam Youssef Phonological theory, feature geometry, segmental phonology, optimality theory, Semitic, Arabic dialectology CASTL Graduate School Peter Jurgec Phonology, optimality theory, feature theory, phonetics-phonology interface, loanword phonology, exceptionality in phonology, tone, acoustic phonetics, Slavic languages, Slovenian CASTL Graduate School Pavel V. Iosad Phonology; its interface with morphology and phonetics; formal aspects of phonological theory; Celtic languages; Slavic languages CASTL 5 The People [»pHipl˘`] Éva Dékány Syntax, Hungarian language and linguistics, verbal particles, spatial expressions, cleft and focus constructions CASTL Andrea Márkus Locality, ellipsis, subject/nonsubject asymmetries, passives and Case CASTL Naoyuki Yamato Japanese syntax CASTL Rosmin Mathew Syntax CASTL Dragana Šurkalovič Prosodic Phonology, especially the Prosodic Hierarchy, Multiple Spell-Out theories and their implications for the Syntax-Phonology Interface, and modelling the Interface in Optimality Theory CASTL Graduate School Administrative staff Christin Kristoffersen Head of Administration Gry Gaard Executive Officer (until February 2008) Tore Børseth Bentz Higher Executive Officer (from October 2008) Professor Kirsti Koch Christensen University of Bergen (chair) Associate Professor Alf Håkon Hoel University of Tromsø Professor Elisabet Engdahl University of Gothenburg Professor Peter Svenonius CASTL Professor Hans Bennis The Meertens Institute Professor David Adger Queen Mary University of London Board of Directors 6 The People [»pHipl˘`] Affiliates Merete Anderssen Associate Professor/ Postdoctoral Research Fellow Antonio Fábregas Associate Professor Tore Nesset Professor Helene N. Andreassen Research Fellow Thorbjörg Hróarsdóttir Researcher Yulia Rodina Postdoctoral Research Fellow Berit Anne Bals Baal Researcher Laura A. Janda Professor Mai Elin Tungseth Associate Professor Kristine Bentzen Postdoctoral Research Fellow Martin Krämer Associate Professor Marit Westergaard Associate Professor Patrik Bye Postdoctoral Research Fellow Ove Lorentz Associate Professor Anna-Lena Wiklund Postdoctoral Research Fellow Philipp Conzett Research Fellow Chantal Lyche Professor Christine Østbø Research Fellow 7 The Work [»w®>`kH] Nanosyntax – A New Approach to Language Michal Starke Nanosyntax is a new approach to the architecture of language, designed to make (better) sense of the new empirical picture emerging from recent years of syntactic research. It is a large-scale project, addressing a wide array of issues, ranging from big issues such as the modularity of language, to fine details, such as the derivation of allomorphy in irregular patterns of given languages and its interaction with syntactic structures. Rethinking the basics opens a period of flux, with many analytical options becoming available and needing to be explored - the CASTL funding has given us the time to tackle such a large-scale project and seriously investigate the many theoretical options. The results of this fundamental research are now starting to be visible, with the framework stabilising and various researchers adopting it and producing results based on it. Two PhD dissertations have been submitted last year (one of them now defended) which are closely based on the nanosyntax framework, and more are coming up. The atoms of language are smaller than we thought The premise leading to the nanosyntactic project is very simple: Syntactic research has produced beautiful empirical generalisations over the last 30 years, and these generalisations have led to a profound change in the kind of mental representations (“syntactic structures”) attributed to speakers. This profound shift has however remained disconnected from syntactic theory, staying within the empirical and notational domain. The theory used on the new structures is largely similar to the theory used 30 years ago (despite terminological changes). That theory is however not a good fit with the new results - our starting question was thus simple: what is the new empirical picture telling us? What do we learn from those beautiful generalisations? A posteriori, the answer is surprisingly simple - though with deep consequences: the new syntactic structures are much larger, and growing by the day, and as a result, their ingredients (their “terminal” nodes) are getting much smaller. This turns out to contradict a fundamental tenet of the field: the deeply ingrained assumption that the ingredients of syntactic structure (the terminal nodes) are lexical items, “words” or “morphemes”. The pervasive view is that syntax is merely a way of arranging such lexical items. As syntactic structures grow however, their termi8 nals become smaller than individual morphemes - the terminals become smaller than morphemes. The field is thus in a position in which its fundamental assumptions are at odds with the results of its best research. We thus need to reconsider the orthodoxy, questioning the very premise that syntax operates on lexical items. Nanosyntax is the result of doing that. Watch your size - ongoing work in Nanosyntax An immediate consequence of terminals being submorphemic is that many - perhaps most - morphemes will span several terminals. And therefore they will correspond to an entire “subtree” rather than corresponding to a terminal. This means that the lexicon contains “subtrees”, syntactic trees, paired with phonological and conceptual information. This view not only makes sense of the large syntactic trees delivered by empirical research, but it also opens a large number of new insights and research avenues. For instance, freeing the lexical items from their terminals allows different lexical items to be of different sizes. This gives us a new tool to understand syntactic contrasts: one avenue explored is that various sizes of lexical elements lead to different syntactic categories (eventive nouns are “bigger” than non-eventive nouns, verbs are bigger than nouns, etc.) and different behaviours. Such reasonings have been explored in recent CASTL dissertations and in ongoing work. Peter Muriungi’s dissertation on the internal structure of Kîîtharaka (Bantu) verbs argues (among other things) that allomorphy, idiomaticity and selection patterns in such verbs require lexical entries of differing size, with competition among them. Björn Lundquist’s dissertation explores the hypothesis that different classes of deverbalizing suffixes match different sizes of the functional sequence. This allows him to explain many otherwise unexplained gaps in the productivity of these morphemes through competition for the lexicalisation of a tree, including competition between a phrase and a single morpheme. A semester-long seminar led by another CASTL PhD student, Pavel Caha, has shown that patterns of allomorphy and syncretism among case affixes can be handled elegantly once the affixes are seen to be of different structural size and compete with each other for lexicalisation of a syntactic structure. Michal Starke has led several seminars on the underlying architecture of nanosyntax, and has shown that the traditional issues surrounding the English -ed idiosyncracies and allomorphies receive an The Work [»w®>`kH] Nanosyntax – A New Approach to Language Photo: Kristine Nyborg e legant treatment in nanosyntax in terms of size. A new line of work by Tarald Taraldsen on noun phrases shows that the size difference offers a promising solution to another traditional problem: noun classes, ranging from 2 or 3 classes in some languages to 10-15 classes in others. Taraldsen shows that nanosyntax offers insights both into the issue of the small number vs. high number of noun classes, and into the syncretism patters among class affixes. Work by Gillian Ramchand has shown that the size difference offers an insightful solution to the traditional issues of ‘verb types’ and their syntactic behaviours, and work by Peter Svenonius is showing how the size consequence of nanosyntax allows us to handle cross-linguistic patterns among prepositions and motion verbs among others. A new view of modularity and interfaces Many more avenues of research are opened by nanosyntax, both within and beyond the size issue. During the last year (2008), our attention has for instance turned to “interface” issues - how a syntactic structure is interpreted as a phonological and conceptual structure. On the phonological side, we have started a new line of argument in favour of nanosyntax and at the same time contributed to open a new and exciting empirical field: phrasal phonological templates. Phrasal templatic phenomena are cases in which a grammatical constituent is restricted by a phonological template (the constituent must correspond to “two moras”, or “one syllable”, etc). In many such cases, the constituent undergoing the phonological templatic restriction is neither a “word” nor a “morpheme”, it is an intermediate node in the representation - a “phrasal” node. The question is how to express the correspondence between that constituent and the phonological template. This issue has remained a mystery, and is largely unapproachable in traditional theories. Nanosyntax however provides an answer: since entire trees are stored in the lexicon, a lexical entry will have no problem associating a phonological constituent (the template) with a syntactic phrase. Such phenomena can be handled by nanosyntax but not by traditional syntax and they thus constitute an important additional argument for the nanosyntax approach. This strand of thought has led to collaboration between the phonology group and the syntax group, with a joint seminar led by Curt Rice and Michal Starke and collaborations with Tobias Scheer (Nice) and Sabrina Bendjaballah (Paris), it has spurred articles on templatic phenomena in Czech infinitival verbs (P. Caha) and an ongoing empirical investigation of Bantu templatic reduplication. Another “interface” issue that has started to be investigated seriously is the relationship between syntax and the research on meaning in formal semantics. The fundamental issue there is that a fine-grained syntax does much of the job that formal semantics is purported to do, and hence makes a semantic “module” redundant. But at the same time, a formal syntax by itself cannot do the last step and deliver ‘meaning’ – i.e. truth-conditions, or any mapping onto an outside domain. We thus need a mapper (‘semantics’), but as soon as we have one, it becomes redundant. This issue quickly leads to difficult philosophical grounds and foundational discussions about ‘meaning’. To handle this, a joint seminar was organised between semantics and syntax, led by Gillian Ramchand and Michal Starke. A few possible solutions to the redundancy dilemma have already come up - all of them involving a rethinking of the relationship between syntax and formal semantics. As it happens, other research groups have been led on a similar path and we are establishing collaboration with them for the near future. This is an exciting avenue of growth for nanosyntax, providing an important piece of the puzzle. 9 The Work [»w®>`kH] Space Exploration Research into linguistic representations of Space and the fine-structural syntax and semantics of the category P Peter Svenonius This CASTL subproject investigates Space and related topics. Specifically, we study how different languages express spatial concepts, including both static location descriptions (The chipmunk hid behind the wood-pile; The wood-pile is on the south side of the house) and also descriptions of motion (Drive south; Climb over the fence). This subproject is led by Professor Peter Svenonius and is integrated with the Moving Right Along ‘Excellent Young Researcher’ (Yngre fremragende forsker) project with financing from the Norwegian Research Council. Space Space research at CASTL builds on extensive previous work on the syntax and semantics of spatial expressions, including cognitive and model-theoretic semantics as well as transformational and minimalist syntax. We examine how linguistic representations of space match cognitive models of space, determining which aspects are represented and which are left up to context, background knowledge, and inference. In so doing, we are able to distinguish linguistic primitives from conceptual information, and this feeds into other subprojects in establishing certain expectations for the nature of the linguistic primitives in other functional domains such as object and event descriptions. Adpositions and category Discussions of space necessarily involve adpositions (prepositions and postpositions), since languages so frequently make use of adpositions in spatial descriptions. At CASTL, we have been exploring the hypothesis that functional structure is much more fine-grained than is usually assumed, and we have been applying this to adpositions, with the result that the adpositions are broken down into multiple syntactic projections, each of which represents a meaning component. One such meaning component that has been the focus of work in 2008 is the one establishing a relation10 Photo: Kristine Nyborg ship between the Figure and Ground (Talmy’s terms for the object being located and the reference object with respect to which it is located). We have isolated certain meaning components which we believe to be centrally concerned with the Figure-Ground configuration, which we have linked to the tendency for ‘functional’ interpretations of spatial expressions documented in experimental work. We have investigated the ways in which these meaning components have effects on syntax, thereby motivating a specific aspect of the continuing decomposition of P. Cross-linguistic comparison An advantage of working with spatial descriptions is that there is a concrete foundation for comparing expressions across languages. The CASTL group has collected information on over 100 languages spoken all over the world, from Arctic languages to languages of the Khoisan people in southern Africa, and from Celtic languages in the west of Europe to Austronesian languages in the east of Asia, as well as North and South American languages and Australian and New Guinean ones. The Work [»w®>`kH] Space Exploration The CASTL group has conducted detailed fieldwork in Tromsø, drawing on the international community in Tromsø to explore such languages as Kîîtharaka from Kenya, Shua from Botswana, Farsi from Iran, and many others. In other cases, field expeditions have been conducted to gather data in India, Indonesia, California, and other locations. The main languages focused on in 2008 have been Korean and several languages of Indonesia. In conjunction with the NORMS project, on-site fieldwork has also been conducted on several Nordic varieties, including Faroese and Älvdalian. Nanosyntax The syntactically active meaning components which we are studying are not always isolable in distinct morphemes; thus, the theoretical framework of Nanosyntax is employed in order to make sense of the fit between syntax and the lexicon. Selected publications appearing in 2008 Pantcheva, Marina. 2008. The place of Place in Persian, in Syntax and Semantics of Spatial P, ed by Anna Asbury, Jakub Dotlacil, Berit Gehrke, and Rick Nouwen, pp. 305-330. John Benjamins, Amsterdam. Son, Minjeong and Peter Cole. 2008. An event-based account of -kan constructions in Standard Indonesian. Language 84.1, pp. 120-160. Son, Minjeong and Peter Svenonius. 2008, Microparameters of Cross-linguistic variation: Directed motion and Resultatives (with Minjeong Son), in the Proceedings of the 27th West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics, ed. by Natasha Abner and Jason Bishop, pp. 388-396. Cascadilla Press, Somerville, Ma. Svenonius, Peter. 2008, Projections of P, in Syntax and Semantics of Spatial P, ed by Anna Asbury, Jakub Dotlačil, Berit Gehrke, and Rick Nouwen, pp. 63-84. John Benjamins, Amsterdam. Svenonius, Peter. 2008 ‘Russian Prefixes are Phrasal’ in Formal Description of Slavic Languages, edited by Gerhild Zybatow, Luka Szucsich, Uwe Junghanns, and Roland Meyer, pp. 526-537. Peter Lang, Frankfurt am Main. Selected presentations In 2008, Peter Svenonius held invited lectures on material related to this project at the University of Maryland, the University of Southern California, the University of California at Santa Cruz, The Center for the Study of Mind in Nature in Oslo, Nanzan University in Nagoya, Osaka Uni- Photo: Peter Svenonius versity, Senshu University in Tokyo, Dongguk University in Seoul, the European Society for Philosophy and Psychology annual meeting in Utrecht, the Syntactic Structures conference at the Russian State University for the Humanities in Moscow, and the Russian Academy of Science in Moscow. He also presented nonspecialist presentations on these themes in a public forum in Tromsø on the occasion of Steven Pinker being awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Tromsø, and on the Språkteigen radio program. The team also presented papers selected by anonymous refereed abstract at the Workshop on Locative Case in Nijmegen (Pantcheva), Complex Predicates in Iranian Languages in Paris (Pantcheva), ConSOLE in Paris (Pantcheva), Japanese and Korean Linguistics in New York (Son), the International Conference on East Asian Linguistics in Vancouver (Son), the International Congress of Linguistics in Seoul (Son), the Penn Linguistics Colloquium in Philadelphia (Son), the International Symposium on Indonesian/ Malay in Leiden, the Netherlands (Son and Svenonius), the West Coast Conference on Formal Linguistics at UCLA in Los Angeles (Son and Svenonius), and the Second Conference on Älvdalian in Älvdalen, Sweden (Svenonius). Http://www.hum.uit.no/mra/. 11 The Work [»w®>`kH] Verbs at the Syntax-Semantics Interface Research into the fine-structural syntax and semantics of the category V Gillian Ramchand This CASTL sub-project, led by Gillian Ramchand, integrates a detailed attention to compositional semantics with the morphological and syntactic facts about verbal structures and argument realisation across languages. Nanosyntax and Lexicalization Increasing evidence from morphological patterning and event structural entailments seems to indicate that the fine structure of the verbal domain is more articulated than classical notions of the VP would suggest. Ramchand has recently proposed in a book published in 2008 (Verb Meaning and the Lexicon: A First Phase Syntax, CUP) that the V of classical phrase structure be split into projections corresponding to `initiation’, `process’ and `result’. Her work at CASTL during 2008 continues to explore the consequences of that hypothesis for both argument structure realisation and complex predicational structures. As a part of the nanosyntax hypothesis being pursued at CASTL, she has particularly focused on issues of lexicalization, where either single monomorphemic words lexicalize large chunks of syntactically elaborated phrase structure (as in the morphemically simple, but event-structurally complex verb in English destroy), or alternatively where several distinct verbal `words’ are used in monoclausal predicational structures expressing the very same thing (as found for example in South Asian languages). For the latter kinds of cases, she has been testing hypotheses related to `underassociation’, which is intended to constrain the operation of The Superset Principle in a particular way, while at the same time accounting for certain facts of syntactic selection. Related to these issues, Ramchand led a seminar on Complex Predications in the fall of 2007, which initiated work on various languages from the community of CASTL researchers, leading to a Nordlyd volume of Tromsø Working Papers published in 2008 especially devoted to that topic. Ramchand also 12 gave an extended seminar series on complex predicates in Kausani, India in May 2008, while doing fieldwork on Hindi/Urdu and Bengali. Ramchand gave invited talks on the theory she proposes in her book at an argument structure workshop in Lund in February 2008 and at a morphology and lexicalization workshop in Verona in November 2008. Structural Semantics is Syntax One very important aspect of the work in this subproject is the attention it pays to achieving a close match between phrase structure/morphological structure and a compositional semantics containing a constrained set of primitives. The hypothesis is that certain abstract semantic notions such as event structure, predication, tense, deictic anchoring, possible worlds, part-whole structure, scalarity etc. are part of a structural semantics that is built in to the central computational system. In this way, understandings of the morphosyntax and of the semantic primitives involved in the build up of linguistic forms go hand in hand. The project involves distinguishing the semantic elements that are structural from those that The Work [»w®>`kH] Verbs at the Syntax-Semantics Interface Photo: Kristine Nyborg are purely conceptual or lexical encyclopaedic. As a part of this general strand of research in the verbal project, Ramchand initiated a project in 2008 on the relationship between tense and modality in the verbal extended projection, more specifically on the relationship between the tense variable and the possible worlds variable in currently accepted formal semantic implementations of this kind of meaning. She ran an advanced seminar in the fall of 2008 on that topic. The seminar involved student and colleague collaborations from a variety of languages including Scandinavian, German, Hungarian, Saramaccan and Russian. The working group discovered a large crosslinguistic conspiracy of mismatches in the domain of tense and modality between morphemic/syntactic ordering on the one hand and semantic composition on the other. This led to questions about the accuracy of the functional sequence as currently proposed in cartographic models and/or the true nature of the semantic primitives involved. Ramchand gave a presentation at the NORMS workshop on tense and modality in Trondheim in September on the topic. Both she and many other members of the group are now planning more extended written up articles building on these results. Ramchand has interacted closely with the Explorations of Space project in contributing to the issues of how verbal semantic structure interacts with the prepositional domain and in the formation of resultatives. Selected publications appearing in 2008: Ramchand, Gillian. 2008. Verb meaning and the Lexicon. Cambridge University Press. Ramchand, Gillian. 2008. Lexical items in complex predications: Selection as Underassociation. Nordlyd, ed. By Peter Svenonius and Inna Tolskaya. Vol 35: 115-141. In Verb Meaning and the Lexicon, Ramchand analyzes the structure of verbs, including this causative example from Hindi/Urdu. Ramchand, Gillian. 2008. Perfectivity as aspectual definiteness: Time and the event in Russian. Lingua. Volume 118(11):1690-1715. Ramchand, Gillian and Peter Svenonius. 2008. Mapping a Parochial lexicon onto a universal semantics. In The Limits of Syntactic Variation. (Theresa Biberauer, ed.). John Benjamins. pp 219-245. Svenonius, Peter and Inna Tolskaya (eds). 2008, Nordlyd: Tromsø Working Papers in Linguistics (Special Volume on Complex Predicates). Vol 35. (Contains papers by CASTL employees including Dékány, Pantcheva, Ramchand, Son, Svenonius, van de Vate, and CASTL affiliates Hróarsdóttir and Wiklund.) 13 The Work [»w®>`kH] DP-Architecture Knut Tarald Taraldsen The morphosyntax of Case In order to explore the explanatory potential of a specific nanosyntactic conception of grammatical case, a research seminar was devoted to ergativity in the first semester of 2008. The seminar was based on a selection of central studies of ergativity, including some of the papers presented in the MIT ergativity seminar the preceding year. Three leading specialists in the field (Maria Polinsky, Julie Legate and Milan Rezac) came to Tromsø to give talks in connection with the seminar. The seminar also included lab sessions with presentations by linguists in the CASTL community. Early on, the research was channeled into an attempt to explain a cross-linguistic correlation between ergativity and major constituent order: There seems to be no clear instance of an ergative SVO language. The main line of analysis followed in the seminar focused on the interaction between remnant VP-movement and Caselicensing within an approach to Case designed by Michal Starke, but sketches of alternative solutions were presented along the way. The nanosyntax of genders and noun classes: Romance and Bantu In addition to ergativity, research in other areas of the nanosyntax of DPs was undertaken. A part of it led to a case-study of the morphosyntax of gender/number marking on nouns and adjectives in the Colonnata variety of Italian (based on Manzini & Savoia’s description) and presented at the Workshop on Theoretical Morphology organized by Leipzig University in June 2008. We also returned to a project initiated earlier on the noun class prefixes in Bantu and their relation to agreement markers, demonstratives and pronouns. To advance that strand of research KTT spent a month at Stellenbosch University in the summer, and returned there in December, using the university library and consulting with colleagues at the Department of African languages. Preliminary results of the investigation of Southern Bantu noun class prefixes and agreement along with a discussion of their relevance to nanosyntax were first presented as an introduction to nanosyntax at a student conference organized by the Charles University in the fall. Further analysis of the Southern Bantu patterns and their bearing on current theorizing in the field of morphosyntax has provided the basis for the research seminar on DP architecture in the first 14 Photo: Kristine Nyborg semester of 2009. The hypothesis argued for is that noun class prefixes in Southern Bantu are built from formatives each of which seems to lexicalize a fairly complex syntactic structure. Further Research on the Architecture of DPs Field work on Afrikaans conducted during KTT's stays in Stellenbosch also led him to start a comparative investigation in two areas of morphosyntax, both related to the overarching investigation of DP architecture. One is the morphosyntax of attributive adjectives and its relation to NP-ellipsis across West Germanic and Scandinavian (based in part on the results from an earlier research seminar on DP-architecture) and the other one is the morphosyntax of particles and their relationship to adpositions in West Germanic and Scandinavian, resurrecting in part issues previously discussed in a presentation by Peter Svenonius and KTT at a Workshop on Comparative Germanic Syntax, in which the behavior of certain locative particles in Norwegian and Afrikaans was compared to the behavior of the possessor noun in the Semitic construct state. Research in this area continues into 2009, and preliminary results relating to the morphosyntax of determiners will be presented in a talk at the NORMS workshop on Determination in Tromsø in March 2009. Another piece of research relating to nouns and DP structure is reported in a short article by KTT for a Festschrift for Guglielmo Cinque to be published in 2009, presenting an account of the well-known failure of certain syntactic operations to apply in noun phrases. Further research related to DP-architecture in 2008 includes Björn Lundquist’s PhD dissertation on nominalizations and participles in Swedish. The Work [»w®>`kH] Revisiting Old Questions in Sound Pattern Research ... ... and finding new, complex, and minimalist answers Bruce Morén-Duolljá Language plays a central role in both linguistic and cognitive science research. It influences how we communicate and think, and it gives us valuable information about how the human mind works. Within the field of Generative Linguistics, we have taken for granted that most, if not all, of the building blocks of language are specific to language and given to us by genetics - i.e. they are innate. This includes the assumption that the mental representations of speech sounds are “hardwired” to particular articulatory and/or auditory characteristics. While this way of thinking has led the linguistic research of the past 50 years, there is growing evidence that many of those things that we once thought to be unlearnable and thus necessarily given at birth can, and probably are, learned after all. This, combined with growing awareness of lesscommonly-studied languages and phenomena that challenge a direct and universal phonetics-phonology relationship (e.g. sign languages), leads to the conclusion that it is time to reassess much of the “received wisdom” we have inherited from the past and to search for more satisfying and less stipulative explanations. A unique vision The main thrust of CASTL phonology research is the exploration of a new view of sound systems in which phonology is distinct from phonetics (i.e. “substance-free”) and where much of segmental and suprasegmental structure traditionally considered to be given by universal grammar is in fact emergent and the result of very general cognitive and grammatical principles (i.e. “minimalist”). Our substance-free, minimalist perspective and our willingness to join forces to address a single set of questions and possible solutions are what set CASTL phonology apart and are our greatest strengths. Our research While our work is appropriately diverse given the range of backgrounds, interests, philosophies and languages represented by our team, it has concentrated mainly on a single project that looks inside individual speech sounds (i.e. segments) to establish their feature composition and the principles determining their internal organization. Among other things, we have argued for the reintroduction and refining of autosegmental representations in Photo: Peter Jurgec contemporary phonology, focused on unresolved featural issues left unaddressed by the popular constraintbased framework, Optimality Theory, suggested that economy and structural complexity are constraining factors in building language-particular feature specifications, and stressed the importance of whole-language analysis and empiricism. We have also demonstrated the value of micro-variation in testing both empirical and theoretical claims. Our novel approach has resulted in international presentations and publications, seminars, workshops, mini-courses, master’s theses and CASTL’s first phonology doctoral dissertation. It has also played a role in innovative phonological theory building that at times dominates European phonology conferences. 15 The Work [»w®>`kH] Revisiting Old Questions in Sound Pattern Research... Expansions and interfaces In 2008, we took the lessons we learned from our work on segment-internal issues and expanded our efforts in three directions. We had a seminar, mini-course and workshop focusing on prosody - i.e. looking outside the segment. This work has caused us to seriously question the universality of prosodic categories and their relationships to one another, and it has led to progress toward a more empirically adequate model of prosody that has a direct connection to our segment-internal concerns. We also had two seminars addressing how phonology interfaces with other areas of the grammar - syntax and phonetics. With the templates seminar, we combined forces with our syntax colleagues to look carefully at templatic effects in morphology and phonology. One key theoretical issue this seminar addressed was that of modularity and whether prosody is a module on its own or if it is a part of phonology or syntax. With the phonetics-phonology interface seminar, we looked at some non-trivial challenges that a phonetics-phonology relationship pose for substance-free phonology, and we gained a firm historical and empirical base with which to assess “substance-full” approaches. Both of these interface seminars have provided a stepping off point for our 2009 plans, which include a new syntax-phonology seminar, a Laboratory Phonology mini-course and workshop, and several individual and joint presentations and publications. i!" t t n " "# Summary 2008 was a very good year for CASTL phonology. We had many activities, identified several new directions for future exploration, and saw the fruits of our labor disseminated to the world in a number of ways. We are encouraged by our accomplishments and the recognition we have received from our peers, and we look forward to the challenges and new opportunities that 2009 brings. Selected 2008 output Blaho, Sylvia. The syntax of phonology: A radically substance-free approach. PhD dissertation. Iosad, Pavel. Teorija optimalnosti: obzor osnovnoj literatury [Optimality Theory: a survey of the principal literature]. Voprosy jazykoznanija. pp.104-121. Jurgec, Peter. Long-Distance Derived Environment Effects and Stratal Identity. 31st Generative Lingustics in the Old World Colloquium. University of Newcastle. Morén, Bruce. Lule Saami Language Research: What exists and what is needed? Lulesamisk foreldre- og språkkonferanse. Árran Lule Saami Center. Rice, Curt. A Momentary Lapse of Reason. 5th Old World Conference in Phonology. Universite de Toulouse le Mirail. Šurkalović, Dragana. Phases and Prosodic Opacity. Workshop on the Prosodic Hierarchy. University of Tromsø. Youssef, Islam. “I am derived, therefore I resist” - Diphthongs in Cairene Arabic, The 16th Manchester Phonology Meeting. University of Manchester. i!" d d n " "# Are the Lule Saami words iedne (mother-gen.sg.) and ieddne (mother-nom.sg.) really pronounced the way the literature and orthography suggest? Linguistics, like all other sciences, requires robust and verified data. Unfortunately, we often encounter neither. CASTL is dedicated to carefully collecting data and using them to build empirically supported linguistic theories. 16 The Work [»w®>`kH] Saami Language Documentation and (Re)vitalization Collecting, Collaborating and Giving Something Back Bruce Morén-Duolljá In addition to our dedication to theory, CASTL is also committed to careful and responsible language description. This includes work on Western Europe’s most endangered language group - found in our own backyard - Saami. Mávsulasj báhkogirjje - “precious dictionary” In April of 2008, Bruce Morén-Duolljá was awarded a grant from the SpareBank Fund (sparebankmidler) for a Lule Saami spoken dictionary pilot project called Mávsulasj báhkogirjje. The purpose of this project is to develop a multi-faceted, multi-user, publicly available, online electronic “sound” dictionary of Lule Saami. This will eventually have English, Norwegian, Swedish and German glosses, audio files of each word spoken by speakers of several dialects, segmented waveforms and spectrograms of systematically selected token words, and pictures. The goal is to build a resource that will not only be useful to linguists of all sorts, but that can also be used by the Lule Saami community. Since Lule Saami is a severely endangered language whose “phonetics, phonology and morpho-phonology are amongst the most complicated in Europe if not in the whole world” (Sammallahti 1990: 441) and few linguistic resources, this project will provide linguists with much needed and timely data. Because there is currently little in the way of pedagogical or language reference resources for this language, this work will also help to fulfill part of our moral obligation to the minority language communities that we collect data from by giving something back to them. The infrastructure, building, translation and preliminary orthographic data collection and collation are underway. The database currently consists of approximately 35,000 entries, and the most important and innovative aspect of the Mávsulasj báhkogirjje pilot project (i.e. the recording, processing and dissemination of precious audio material from language consultants) is scheduled to begin late in the spring of 2009. Photo: Kristine Nyborg Network for Saami Documentation and (Re)vitalization In February of 2008, Bruce Morén-Duolljá (CASTL) and Tove Bull (Humanities Faculty) organized a workshop on Saami documentation and (re)vitalization. This attracted over 50 participants from 9 countries and led directly to a successful NordForsk grant to establish the Network for Saami Documentation and (Re)vitalization. This grant is to enhance Saami language research, documentation, and maintenance and (re) vitalization by keying these directly to one another. The aims are to build a collaborative network of specialists and speech community members; develop efficient, coordinated projects; and establish new methods, tools and protocols for these endangered languages. This network will benefit researchers and minority language users within the Nordic region and Russia by fostering better understanding among researchers from different fields and traditions, nurturing better understanding between researchers and speech communities, and creating ways to make the data collected by linguists immediately available for language support. Besides developing a web-based archive to ensure that Saami language research and resources are easily found and accessible (using LingBuzz as a model), it will also fund workshops and researcher summer school activities aimed at improving the knowledge-base of young researchers and giving them unique opportunities to build collaborative networks of their own. The network currently has 27 groups composed of 101 individuals from eight countries. 17 The Work [»w®>`kH] The Language Acquisition Group Photo: Kristine Nyborg Exploring Microvariation in the Input and Extracting Micro-cues from Micro‑people Marit Westergaard/Kristine Bentzen Research projects The Tromsø Language Acquisition Group explores children’s sensitivity to micro-variation in the input and the corresponding distinctions in syntax and information structure in the adult language. So far, our research has focused on Norwegian, English and Russian. Due to the focus on variation in adult grammars, our research is closely linked to current work on syntactic theory. The overarching research project is VIA (Variation in the Input in Acquisition). A CASTL-affiliated subproject of this, VAMOS (Variation and Acquisition: Multiple Object and Subject positions), is funded by a grant from the Tromsø Research Foundation 2008-2010. The VIA project investigates children’s acquisition of different types of word order variation, e.g. the well-known optionality of verb second (V2) in wh-questions in certain Norwegian dialects, illustrated in the following example. Ka trur du? / Ka du trur? what think you/what you think ‘What do you think? The project addresses questions such as: What kind of word order variation are children exposed to and what are 18 the relevant distinctions in the adult language? Do children exhibit any word order preferences in such cases and what influences their choices (e.g. economy, complexity, input frequency)? How early and to what extent are children sensitive to prosodic cues and the small nuances in syntax and information structure that govern adult grammars in cases of word order variation? Is there any indication in children’s behavior that they set major word order parameters or (over-)generalize in syntax? What can the study of language acquisition reveal about the nature of possible variation in the adult language? And how can knowledge of children’s preferences contribute to our understanding of historical word order change? Micro-cues Our general findings show that children are surprisingly sensitive to fine distinctions in syntax and information structure from early on, producing target-consistent word orders in different contexts, e.g. V2 in declaratives, non-V2 in exclamatives and both in wh-questions. This has led to the abandonment of a parameter setting model of acquisition, common within traditional gene rative theory. Instead, a new cue-based approach to language acquisition and change has been developed, a model of micro-cues. The micro-cues are small pieces of structure formed in children’s I-language grammars on exposure to relevant triggers in the primary linguistic data. This model assumes a somewhat reduced genetic language faculty made up of syntactic primitives and basic operations, enabling the child to parse the input and formulate the micro-cues, which must be learned from input. The Work [»w®>`kH] The Language Acquisition Group Photo: Thoralf Fagertun The TROmsø Language acquisition Lab (TROLL) We investigate children’s linguistic production both in spontaneous corpus data and elicited experiments. Data from child-directed speech are also studied in order to determine the effect of input frequency. As much of our research is based on experimental data, we established a language acquisition lab on campus in 2008, funded by CASTL and the Department of Language and Linguistics. In the lab we conduct grammar experiments with children aged 3 to 8. Getting children to produce specific clause types is quite a challenge, and our experiments are carefully designed and tested in pilots before the investigation starts. In 2008 we investigated children’s behavior in subject and object shift constructions. Other activities Our research resulted in one PhD dissertation and several publications in 2008. We have also presented talks both nationally and internationally, e.g. at the Centre for the Study of Mind and Nature in Oslo (Westergaard), the International Congress for the Study of Child Language in Edinburgh (Anderssen), the Formal Descriptions of Slavic Languages in Moscow (Rodina and Westergaard), the International Conference for English Historical Linguistics in Munich (Westergaard), guest lectures in York, Lund, and Berlin (Westergaard), and an invited presentation at an international workshop on Frequency and Language Development in Wuppertal (Anderssen, Bentzen, Rodina and Westergaard). We were also invited to contribute at an interdisciplinary workshop on Dyslexia and Language in Tromsø. Furthermore, we have written popularized articles on language acquisition for the magazines BARN and Labyrint, and there was a report on our Lab in Labyrint's December issue. Finally, we have contributed to a national radio program (in particular Kristine Bentzen), and Marit Westergaard gave a non-specialist talk for a wider audience in connection with Steven Pinker's visit to Tromsø to be awarded an honorary doctorate in March. Selected 2008 Output Rodina, Yulia. Semantics and Morphology: The Acquisition of Grammatical Gender in Russian. PhD dissertation. Westergaard, Marit. Acquisition and Change: On the Robustness of the Triggering Experience for Word Order Cues. Lingua. Westergaard, Marit. Verb Movement and Subject Place ment in the Acquisition of Word Order: Pragmatics or Structural Economy? In First Language Acquisition of Morphology and Syntax: Perspectives across languages and learners. John Benjamins. Anderssen, Merete, Kristine Bentzen, Yulia Rodina & Marit Westergaard. The Acquisition of Subject and Object Shift in Norwegian: Frequency Issues. Invited talk, Wuppertal Workshop on Frequency and Language Development. 19 The Work [»w®>`kH] Postdoc & Researcher Projects in 2008 Luisa Martí The pieces of indefinites and the nature of cross-linguistic variation Indefinites (words corresponding to English some, somebody, anybody, nobody, etc.) in many languages are morphologically complex. Interrogative words (the corresponding word for English what), simple indefinites, or generic nouns (thing, person, etc.) are building blocks of complex indefinites in many languages. This project takes this cross-linguistic tendency seriously and investigates to what extent the properties of complex indefinites can be predicted from the properties of the parts these indefinites are built up from. So far the project has looked at certain indefinites in Spanish, Portuguese, Swedish and German, and the result is the indefiniteness hierarchy, a collection of indefinite semantic properties that aims to be universal. Part of the work has been devoted to making sure that the number of properties postulated is maximally small, with other properties deduced from them. Currently, the project is focusing on specificity. Looking at specific indefinites in languages like Russian, German or English reveals that it is possible to isolate linguistically-relevant aspects of specificity, and with further work it will be possible to determine how much of specificity needs to be built into the hierarchy. Isabelle Roy My main research interests are situated at the interface between syntax and semantics, and are articulated around the core issue of understanding how traditional semantic preoccupations transpose into syntax. Favoring a comparative approach, my work focuses mainly on: (i) predication, (ii) nouns in their non-argumental uses, including, but not limited to, the use of nominals as direct predicates, nominals in complex prepositions and (iii) stative predicates and the typology of states. Another aspect of my research is concerned with the interface between syntax and lexicon, and specifically (i) lexical categories (nouns vs. adjectives, adjectives vs. verbs), (ii) the use of adjectives as nominals (e.g. the rich), and (iii) nominalizations of adjectives (e.g. abstract-abstraction). Gunnar Hrafn Hrafnbjargarson In my research project, which has been a long-term cooperation with Anna-Lena Wiklund (ArcSyn), Kristine Bentzen (CASTL), and Þorbjörg Hróarsdóttir (ArcSyn), I have focused on variation in verb movement and V2 within the Scandinavian languages. The project has resulted in a number of publications in working papers and peer-reviewed journals as well as presentations at large international confer- 20 ences, such as GLOW and CGSW. The most interesting results of the project include: (i) there are reasons to believe that Icelandic does not have V-to-I movement independent of V2, (ii) Icelandic does not seem to have generalized embedded V2, as standardly claimed. In this language all verb movement is V2 movement, but V2 is restricted in varieties of Icelandic in the same way as in the other Scandinavian languages. The results of a fieldwork done in the Faroe Islands (August 2008 during the 5th NORMS dialect workshop) will soon be published in a co-authored paper with Kristine Bentzen, Piotr Garbacz (Lund University), and Caroline Heycock (University of Edinburgh). We show that the verb movement pattern found in Faroese resembles the pattern found in other Scandinavian varieties, such as Northern Norwegian and Kronoby Swedish. Øystein Vangsnes I have a strong research commitment for the study of grammatical variation across the Nordic language area, and together with Peter Svenonius I coordinate the NORMS project, which in turn relates to a wider joint Nordic effort for dialect syntax: the ScanDiaSyn project umbrella. My own current research focuses on the structure of wh-nominals across North Germanic, an area which previously has not been subject to detailed investigation and which displays extensive variation both in terms of the range of wh-expressions used and in terms of the ways in which the various expressions are used. We find for instance expressions which can lexicalize both which, what-kind-of, and manner-how in one dialect but only the latter two in another, there are dialects where expressions that literally translates as what-kind-of can have the meaning of which, and there are dialects where which and who have the same form. I have three 2008 publications on the matter and several additional articles in preparation which relate to the domain of North Germanic wh-nominals. Minjeong Son My general research interests lie in the syntax and semantics of complex predicates (e.g., resultatives, directed motion), syntactic decomposition of events, and East Asian (Korean/ Japanese) and Austronesian (e.g., Indonesian) linguistics. In particular, I have worked on various types of complex predicates in Korean and Indonesian defending the syntactic decomposition of event semantics. In connection with the Moving Right Along project, I have been conducting research on spatial and motion expressions in Korean and languages spoken in Indonesia. I am currently investigating serial verb constructions expressing directed manner of motion in Indonesian/Malay and Korean in comparison with other serializing languages (e.g., Tetun Dili, Thai). The Work [»w®>`kH] PhD Projects in 2008 Monica Bašić Assuming a rather fine-grained typology of movement operations, the goal of the project is to investigate interactions between different movement types, address the question of whether various movement operations enter into feeding/bleeding relations, and if so, whether there are restrictions regarding ordering in their application. I explore whether observed interactions discussed recently by Williams (2003) and Abels (2007) can be related to the functional hierarchy, starting from the hypothesis that there is a close correspondence between the clausal and nominal functional structure. I further discuss cross-linguistic distribution of wh-scrambling and wh-topicalization constructions and argue that variation in availability of these constructions across languages can be captured by assuming that different A'-like movement operations do not enter into feeding relations, at least in cases where the same constituent undergoes both movement steps. I argue that in languages like Japanese and Serbian where wh-scrambling constructions are licit, not all wh-phrases need to move to the C domain either overtly or covertly, and in fact they cannot do so if wh-movement is to be fed by scrambling. In German-type languages all wh-phrases must end up in SpecCP. As a result, wh-phrases cannot be scrambled. I further support these conclusions by relating the availability of wh-scrambling constructions across languages to the distribution of pair-list and single-pair readings in multiple questions. number and definiteness on adjectives and closed nominal word classes. The result is a more economic account of featural distribution where elements that otherwise appear as polysemic may be shown to hold one invariant meaning that conveys different interpretations depending on both extra- and intralinguistic context. From the neo-saussurean view of Language as a system of values with the conventionalised arbitrary sign as its unit, combinatorial signs, or syntax, is seen as a device to restrict this arbitrariness. While in Norwegian, combinatorial signs are mostly encoded by juxtaposition, the syntactic analyses also resuscitate the role of intonation as a distinctive grammatical feature in its nominal system. Peter Jurgec Working title: The Nanosyntax of Case In my dissertation, I apply the Nanosyntactic approach of Michal Starke to case representation and case assignment. I investigate the possibility that each case is a collection of privative features, and that each such feature is a separate head in the syntactic tree. The thesis focuses on the nature of phonological representations. Three basic questions are examined. First, what are the substantive parts of phonological domains (i.e. segments, morphemes, words, etc.), which are conventionally called features? Second, how are phonological features organized (within any domain)? Third, what is the relation between phonological features and their phonetic (articulatory, acoustic, perceptual) content? So far I have looked into the mechanism of how features spread. The established theories see feature spreading as a process which can be contained either by a blocking segment (which cannot have the feature) or by reaching the edge of some larger prosodic or morphological domain. I focus on two previously under-reported cases of how spreading is stopped. Sometimes, spreading is limited to one target (non-iterativity). Other times, a segment can be spread onto, but at the same time blocks any further spreading (icy targets). I take both patterns as evidence for the mechanism of feature spreading, and consequently how features are organized. According to Binary Domains Theory, which I am currently developing, feature domains are binary, hierarchical and overlapping. An icy target, for example, can be a dependent of a feature, but cannot be its head. Madeleine Halmøy Björn Lundquist Working title: The Norwegian Nominal System from a Neo‑Saussurean Viewpoint The thesis is devoted to the relation between form, meaning and interpretation in the Norwegian nominal system, contrasted with English, French and the other Scandinavian languages. One of the major findings is that the truly bare form of the Norwegian noun is not marked for singular indefiniteness, as is generally assumed, but rather for general number, i.e. is neutral with regard to both number and definiteness. This finding has important implications for the understanding of the rest of the Norwegian nominal inventory, especially what regards the distribution of gender, Title: Participles and Nominalizations in Swedish (submitted December 2008) The dissertation has two major goals: (I) to reach a better understanding of the "lexical" semantics of different types of verbs by investigating which properties of the verbs survive in different types of nominalizations and participles, and (II) to pin down the exact semantic and morphosyntactic properties of different types of nominalizing and participle-forming morphemes. In classical Tromsø-style, I have paid equal attention to semantic, morphological and syntactic detail. Pavel Caha 21 The Work [»w®>`kH] PhD Projects in 2008 Peter Kinyua Muriungi Title: Phrasal Movements inside Bantu Verbs. Deriving affix scope and order in Kîîtharaka (submitted August 2008, defended February 2009) The thesis tries to determine the principles that govern affix ordering in Kîîtharaka, an SVO Bantu language spoken in Kenya. It starts by determining the base hierarchy of affixes by using semantic scope. Thus, if an affix A scopes over an affix B, A asymmetrically c-commands B in the phrasal structure configuration. The thesis then investigates how the affixes in the base hierarchy are re-ordered to produce the surface string. It is shown that a constituent containing the verb root undergoes phrasal movement past an affix in a mixture of cyclic and roll-up movement. This movement mechanism, which I refer to as dragging movement, is shown to be strikingly similar to the mechanism that derives the typological variation in the ordering of demonstrative, numeral and adjective in the extended projection of the noun (Cinque 2005). The thesis therefore shows that the ordering of the affixes in the extended projection of the verb phrase in Kîîtharaka and the ordering of modifiers in the extended projection of the noun phrase fall under the same generalization. of the clause structure, between the argumental area (VP) and the pragmatic area (CP). Schweikert’s prepositional hierarchy for German is illustrated in (1): (1)Temporal > >Location>Reason>Comitative>Source> Goal>Instrument>Vehicle >Manner On the basis of empirical diagnostics, I investigate the hierarchy of postpositions in Japanese and attempt to provide answers to the following questions: • Are Japanese postpositional phrases adjuncts or specifiers? Or are they attached directly into the main projection line? • Are Japanese PPs also hierarchically arranged? If so, do they conform to Schweikert’s prepositional hierarchy for German? • Can we extend Schweikert’s analysis to Japanese PPs? The PP hierarchy diagnostics adopted in this project are: 1) Focus neutral order of the postpositional phrases, 2) Information Focus, 3) Scope ambiguity and 4) Role disambiguation. Marina Pantcheva Islam Youssef Working title: Decomposing Path This dissertation is part of the Moving Right Along project and discusses the syntax of spatial expressions. I focus on expression of directed motion and investigate the fine-grained structure of Goal, Source, and Route paths. I base my research on cross-linguistic data and show in my dissertation that different types of paths are of different complexity and, crucially, are subject to a superset-subset relationship. Thus, I develop a more detailed syntactic structure for paths, maximally comprising three distinct heads. More specifically, I suggest that Goal paths are built on top of a locative Place head, Source paths are built on top of Goal paths and therefore contain them, and Route paths have the most complex structure in that they take as a complement a Source path. Working title: Place Assimilations in Arabic: Contrast and Feature Geometry A major trend in phonological theory views phonology as an abstract cognitive system and considers as primary evidence the system of contrasts, regardless of its phonetic and acoustic correlates (Dresher, Piggot & Rice 1994, Avery 1996 inter alia). My research provides evidence from Cairene and Baghdadi Arabic that phonological activity is dependent on the structure of the contrast system of a given language. I investigate place assimilations in these two dialects of Arabic in the framework of the Parallel Structures Model of feature geometry (Morén 2003, 2006, 2007). The project covers both primary and secondary place assimilations, i.e. complete assimilation, coronal place assimilation, pharyngealization, palatalization, labialization, and monophthongization. By considering their implications for the complete feature analysis of each language, this work resolves some controversial and long standing issues regarding these place assimilations. Furthermore, it brings interesting comparisons and parallels between processes that seem similar, but may be representationally distinct. Finally, the analysis provides evidence to support the need for segmental representations in a constraint-based model like Optimality Theory. Kaori Takamine Working title: The syntactic structure of postpositional phrases in Japanese In this project, I investigate the structure of adjunct postpositional phrases in Japanese. Following Cinque (2003), Schweikert (2006) proposes that adjunct prepositional phrases are hierarchically ordered and generated in the middle field 22 Study at CASTL [»st√Rij] Master’s level Already in the 1990s, two Masters programs were started by members of the group now working at CASTL, one in general linguistics and one in English linguistics. These are two-year programs with substantially overlapping offerings, taught in English, focusing on theoretical linguistics, especially phonology and syntax. The first year consists of coursework and the second year is devoted to a thesis. It is common for second-year students to participate in CASTL research seminars. Students completing these Master’s programs have found their way to a number of prestigious PhD programs around the world, including those at the Universities of Utrecht, Leiden, Groningen, Delaware, Michigan, Connecticut and New York (NYU). And, of course, some have been admitted to the PhD program at CASTL. Students interested in applying to the Master’s programs in linguistics at the University of Tromsø should get in touch with us and we’ll help you get the process started. PhD level CASTL’s PhD program is among a handful of graduate schools selected by the Board of Directors at the University of Tromsø to focus on developing internationally competitive programs. When new PhD students arrive at the CASTL graduate school, they consult with an advisor to select three seminars or courses to follow already in the first semester. This results in immediate integration into the CASTL research teams. During this initial period, students focus on their work as members of research teams and on writing pa- pers. In this way, they engage in a rigorous and demanding program. Frequent individual meetings with team leaders, advisors, and other faculty keep them on track, moving steadily forward. A dissertation project emerges from the intensive work carried out early in the program, and the papers that the students have written will contribute to the dissertation. Students in their third and fourth years will set off increasing amounts of time for writing up their research as a unified opus, but nonetheless will continue to be part of the research team most relevant for their work. Our PhD program is still young, but the generous financing from the University of Tromsø for this project is already showing results in the form of rapid advancement among our doctoral students. They frequently give presentations – both at student conferences and at major international conferences. Our students also publish articles, including some in refereed journals. In 2007 Kristine Bentzen defended her dissertation Order and Structure in Embedded Clauses in Northern Norwegian as the first CASTL student to complete the PhD. In 2008 two more students obtained their doctoral degrees, Sylvia Blaho with the dissertation The syntax of phonology. A radically substance-free approach, and CASTL quota student Yulia Rodina with the dissertation Semantics and Morphology: The Acquisition of Grammatical Gender in Russian. Following in their footsteps, Peter Muriungi and Björn Lundquist submitted their dissertations in 2008. In the coming years, more of our students will join the already distinguished collection of doctorates in theoretical linguistics from the University of Tromsø. Photo: Kristine Nyborg 23 PhD Dissertations in 2008 [«tIs®`»tHe˘Sn˘` s] Sylvia Blaho Title: The Syntax of Phonology. A radically substance-free approach Supervisors: Curt Rice and Bruce Morén-Duolljá Topic for the trial lecture: “Syllabic consonants” Dissertation date: June 6 Committee: Professor Keren Rice, University of Toronto Professor Marc van Oostendorp, Meertens Institute and University of Leiden Associate Professor Martin Krämer, University of Tromsø The defence was led by Dean Rolf Gaasland Photo: Peter Jurgec My thesis investigates the formal properties of phonological representation and computation. The starting point of the approach taken is that these can and should be investigated independently of the effect that extraphonological factors, most notably phonetics, have on the shape of individual phonologies. The dissertation discusses different formal aspects of phonological representations, and argues for a model using privative indexical features that can freely enter into feature geometrical dependency relations with one another. These representations are integrated with an Optimality Theoretical model of computation, and constraint schemas governing featural interactions are discussed. The working of the model is illustrated by three case studies: Slovak sandhi voicing, Hungarian voicing assimilation, and Pasiego Spanish vowel harmony. The work was supervised by Curt Rice, with additional supervision by Patrik Bye for the first half, and Bruce Morén for the finishing stages of the process. Although not formally connected to the project, extended discussions with Christian Uffmann were an important catalyst of the ideas developed in my dissertation. The dissertation committee consisted of Keren Rice (Toronto), Marc van Oostendorp (Meertens/Leiden) and Martin Krämer (Tromsø). My defense was preceded by a one-day workshop on substance-free phonology, with presentations by Christian Uffmann, Patrik Bye, Peter Jurgec & Bruce Morén and Dave Odden (Ohio). 24 After finishing my dissertation, I have worked on a number of projects with Curt Rice, most notably, a paper on variation in substance-free phonology, which has been presented at a number of venues since, and editing the book Modelling Ungrammaticality in Optimality Theory, to appear with Equinox Publishing. We are presenting our newest findings on this topic at GLOW 32 in April, 2009. Photo: Peter Jurgec PhD Dissertations in 2008 [«tIs®`»tHe˘Sn˘` s] Yulia Rodina Title: Semantics and Morphology: The Acquisition of Grammatical Gender in Russian Supervisors: Tore Nesset and Marit Westergaard Topic for the trial lecture: “Cognitive and Social Factors Influencing Language Acquisition” Dissertation date: April 25 Committee: Professor Natascha Müller, Bergische Universität Wuppertal Associate Professor Sergej Avrutin, Utrecht Institute of Linguistics Professor Curt Rice, University of Tromsø The defence was led by Dean Rolf Gaasland Photo: Adnan Icagic In spring 2008 I defended my doctoral dissertation Semantics and morphology: The acquisition of grammatical gender in Russian. The dissertation has been written under the supervision of professor Marit Westergaard and professor Tore Nesset and investigates how Russian children acquire the category of grammatical gender in their mother tongue. The focus of the study is on several specific classes of nouns whose gender is usually derived from their semantic rather than their morphological properties, such as papa ‘daddy’, vrač ‘doctor’, plaksa ‘cry baby’ as well as some short forms of male and female names like Svetik and Vanya. Previously, such nouns have been found to be problematic for children acquiring various languages. This dissertation presents the results of acquisition experiments with 37 Russian-speaking children and provides novel evidence suggesting that between the ages of 2½ and 6 children are rather sensitive to the noun’s form. Special attention in the dissertation is paid to the asymmetries in children’s agreement production with various classes of nouns. The detailed analysis of the experimental results reveals that children distinguish classes of nouns and that primary linguistic data play an important role in this process. The dissertation proposes a cue-based approach to the acquisition of grammatical gender in Russian that aims to explain the differentiated use of semantic agreement with various classes of nouns that emerges from the data. This approach is based on Westergaard’s (2008) cue-based model and argues against the semantic hierarchy theory proposed by Corbett (1991). Specifically, given children’s early sensitivity to fine distinctions in syntax, semantics and morphology, it is argued that there are separate semantic cues for the individual noun classes distinguished by children, which may be seen as formal representations of very specific semantic rules that children apply “locally” to each class of nouns in particular. Photo: Adnan Icagic 25 CASTL Related Projects [»p®• a>«dZ É Eks] Moving Right Along Moving Right Along is a project led by Professor Peter Svenonius, financed under the Norwegian Research Council’s Yngre Fremragende Forsker program, and administered under the auspices of CASTL. It is a five-year project (2005-2009) with the objective of investigating crosslinguistic expressions of motion and location, focusing on adpositional systems and their functional equivalents. NORMS NORMS (NORdic Centre of Excellence in Microcomparative Syntax) is a network project for the period 2005-2010 administered by Peter Svenonius and Øystein A. Vangsnes. The goal of the project is to map, document, and analyze the complex patchwork of grammatical variation throughout the dialects of the Scandinavian language continuum, from Iceland in the west to the Swedishspeaking areas of Finland in the east, and from the northernmost dialects of Norwegian to the Danish-German border area in the south. The network consists of seven partner universities in the Nordic countries, University of Iceland (Reykjavík), University of Aarhus, University of Oslo, the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (Trondheim), University of Tromsø, Lund University, and University of Helsinki. The main joint activity in NORMS proceeds along two lines. First, the participating researchers in the project are organized in the following ten form-focused cross-institutional thematic groups: (i) The syntax of noun phrases, (ii) Verb placement in main and embedded clauses, (iii) The syntax of the left periphery, (iv) Object Shift, (v) Verb particle constructions, (vi) Argument structure, (vii) Subject types, (viii) Auxiliaries and modality, (ix) Pragmatic particles, (x) Negation and negative polarity. These groups organize thematic workshops and meetings at irregular intervals. Second, every semester NORMS organizes an excursion to some dialect area where participants from the various partner institutions come together for a week to conduct dialectological fieldwork. So far there have been five such field excursions, to Northern Ostrobothnia (June 2006), the island of Senja, Northern Norway (October/November 2006), Älvdalen, Sweden (May/June 2007), Western Jutland, Denmark (January 2008), and the Faroe Islands (August 2008). The sixth excursion will take place in the border area between Hedmark (Norway) and Värmland (Sweden) in May 2009. A substantial portion of the NORMS budget has been reserved for hiring researchers at postdoc level in shortterm positions, and the following scholars have been 26 Photo: Tania Strahan employed: Gunnar Hrafn Hrafnbjargarson (Tromsø 20062008), Mai Ellin Tungseth (Lund 2006-2008), Maia Andreasson (Århus 2007-2008), Eva Engels (Oslo 2007-2009), Pål Kristian Eriksen (Helsinki 2007-2009), Tania Strahan (Reykjavik 2007-2009). NORMS is currently filling additional short-term positions for the remaining two-year period. The results and findings from the project activities are now starting to emerge. In addition to data presented and analyzed in individual papers and dissertations, several volumes on specific dialects and dialect areas are currently being prepared, notably edited anthologies on Northern Norwegian, Faroese, Övdalian, and Northern Ostrobothnian. Volumes based on thematic workshops are also under way, such as a special issue of Studia Linguistica on exclamatives. VAMOS The VAMOS (Variation and Acquisition: Multiple Object and Subject positions) project is funded by the Tromsø Reseach Foundation and led by Professor Paula Fikkert at Radboud University, Nijmegen, who is also employed part-time at the University of Tromsø from January 2009. The project started up in October 2008 with Yulia Rodina and Merete Anderssen as post-doctoral fellows. The VAMOS project investigates children’s acquisition of subject and object placement in several constructions in which two different positions are permitted for these elements. The structures under investigation include subject CASTL Related Projects [»p®• a>«dZ É Eks] Syntactic Architecture (ArcSyn) The ArcSyn project is led by Thórbjörg Hróarsdóttir. The project is funded by the Norwegian Research Council (NFR) for the period February 2005 - December 2010 with a budget of 6 million NOK. The project forms the Tromsø Dream Team, consisting of Thorbjörg Hróarsdóttir, Kristine Bentzen, Gunnar Hrafn Hrafnbjargarson and Anna-Lena Wiklund. The project is divided into three main parts: (i) I-Language versus E-Language Change (Hróarsdóttir) (ii) Scandinavian Verb Movement (Hróarsdóttir & Wiklund) (iii)mOVe: Movement and OV languages (Hróarsdóttir) Photo: Kristine Nyborg and object shift, verb particle constructions and double object constructions. Examples are provided in (1) - (4). (1)Den boka har ikke John/*han lest / that book has not John / he read / Den boka har John/han ikke lest that book has John/ he not read (2)John leste ikke den boka/*den / John read not that book / it / John leste *den boka/den ikke John read that book/it not (3)John leste ut bok -a /*den / John read out book-the/ it / John leste bok -a /den ut John read book-the/it out (completed) (4)John ga Maria en bok / John gave Mary a book / John ga en bok til Maria John gave a book to Mary The primary focus of our investigation is Norwegian, but some of these constructions will be studied in Dutch, English and Russian as well. The project will also include a study of the acquisition of double object constructions by Norwegian-Russian bilinguals. The research will be carried out experimentally in the recently established TROmsø Language acquisition Lab (TROLL) with children from the daycare centers and a school close to the University campus. The Pieces of Indefinites and the Nature of CrossLinguistic Variation This project is directed by Post Doctoral Fellow Luisa Martí. The aim of the project is to achieve a better cross-linguistic understanding of indefiniteness. The project has received funding from the Research Council of Norway. NLVN – Nordic Language Variation Network Nordic Language Variation Network (NLVN) is a cooperative effort of six excellent research groups to investigate issues of linguistic variation from a partly sociolinguistic and partly theoretical, generative perspective. In general there is a certain degree of tension and disagreement between these two schools with respect to both methods and to fundamental ontological questions, and the primary objective of NLVN is to create a forum for constructive confrontation and discussion between sociolinguists and grammarians so that a deeper and broader understanding of causes, limitations, and basis for linguistic variation can be established. NLVN is funded in 2006–2009 by NordForsk (the Nordic Research Board) under their network scheme for national centers of excellence in the Nordic countries. The network is administered from CASTL at the University of Tromsø and by a steering committee of five scholars from the network. Participants: Tromsø: CASTL Copenhagen: LANCHART Reykjavík: IceDiaSyn Lund: GRIMM Trondheim et al.: UPUS Bergen: FORSE 27 The Output [»/aÉUt|«pHUt|] Selections 2008 Publications Klaus Abels; Peter Muriungi “The Focus Marker in Kîîtharaka: Syntax and Semantics”, Lingua Laura Alexis Janda “Motion Verbs and the Development of Aspect in Russian”, Scando-Slavica Monika Bašić “On Nominal Subextractions in Serbian”, Balkanistica Ove Lorentz “Tonelagsbasis i norsk”, Maal og Minne Patrik Bye “Om jamvekts og vokalbalansens oppkomst og utvikling i sentralskandinavisk”, Norsk lingvistisk tidsskrift Luisa Martí ”The Semantics of Plural Indefinite Noun Phrases in Spanish and Portuguese”, Natural Language Semantics Tore Nesset “PATH and MANNER: An ImageSchematic Approach to Russian Verbs of Motion”, Scando-Slavica Madeleine Halmøy ”Number, (In)definiteness and Norwegian Nouns”, Proceedings of SuB12 Gunnar H. Hrafnbjargarson; Roberta D’Allessandro; Susann Fischer “On Agreement Restrictions”, Agreement Restrictions, Mouton de Gruyter. Thorbjörg Hróarsdóttir “Types of DPs in OV Order”, Studia Linguistica Pavel Iosad “Teorija optimalnosti: obzor osnovnoj literatury [Optimality Theory: a survey of the principal literature]”, Voprosy jazykoznanija Marina Pantcheva “The Place of PLACE in Persian”, Syntax and Semantics of Spatial P, John Benjamins. Gillian C. Ramchand “Perfectivity as Aspectual Definiteness: Time and the Event in Russian”, Lingua Minjeong Son; Peter Cole “An Event-Based Account of –kan Constructions in Standard Indonesian”, Language Peter Svenonius “The Position of Adjectives and other Phrasal Modifiers in the Decomposition of DP”, in Adjectives and Adverbs: Syntax, Semantics, and Discourse, Oxford University Press. Peter Svenonius; Gillian C. Ramchand “Mapping a Parochial Lexicon onto a Universal Semantics”, The Limits of Syntactic Variation, John Benjamins. Kaori Takamine “Rare: Two Types of Root Modals in Japanese”, The Proceedings of the Ninth Tokyo Conference on P Marleen Susanne van de Vate ”I músu fu woóko taánga: Restructuring in Saamáka”, Nordlyd Marit Westergaard “Acquisition and Change: On the Robustness of the Triggering Experience for Word Order Cues”, Lingua Anna-Lena Wiklund “Tense/Mood/Aspect-doubling”, Syntax and Semantics Publications 2008 Articles in refereed journals 19 Chapters/articles in books 14 Reviews in refereed journals 4 Books 5 Doctoral dissertations 2 Articles in other journals 20 Total 64 28 The Output [»/aÉUt|«pHUt|] Selections 2008 Presentations Monika Bašić; Eugenia Romanova “Motion Verbs with Inceptive Prefixes in Serbian and Russian” Syntactic Structures 2, Moscow Kristine Bentzen; Klaus Abels ”Is there any Evidence for Punctuated Paths?” DGfS, Bamberg Éva Dékány “Comitative Adjuncts: Appositives and Non-Appositives” MSCL-3, Moscow Pavel Iosad “All that Glistens is not Gold: against Autosegmental Approaches to Initial Consonant Mutations.” GLOW 31, Newcastle Peter Jurgec “Long-Distance Derived Environment Effects and Stratal Identity” GLOW 31, Newcastle Martin Krämer “Taking a Free Ride Can Cau[r]se Severe Hyperrhoticity” 16th Manchester Phonology Meeting, Manchester Björn Lundquist; Gillian Ramchand ”Verbs of Contact” Comparative Germanic Syntax Workshop, Edinburgh Luisa Martí; Klaus Abels ”All Split Scope is not Alike” Sinn und Bedeutung 13, Stuttgart Michal Starke “Nanosyntax – How Can I Make You See”, Words don’t come easy, Verona Rosmin Mathew “Restrictions on Clefting in Malayalam” Cleft 08, Berlin Dragana Šurkalovič “Phases and Prosodic Opacity”, Workshop on the Prosodic Hierarchy, Tromsø Bruce Morén “Lule Sami Sound-based Documentation: Considering Researchers’ and Speakers’ Needs. Saami Documentation and Revitalization Workshop, Tromsø Marina Pantcheva “Assembling Persian Complex Predicates” ConSole XVI, Paris Curt Rice “A Momentary Lapse of Reason” 5th Old World Conference in Phonology, Toulouse Yulia Rodina; Marit Westergaard “A Cue-Based Approach to the Acquisition of Grammatical Gender in Russian”, Formal Descriptions of Slavic Languages 7.5, Moscow Minjeong Son “Cross-Linguistic Variation in Resultatives: with Reference to Korean and English”, 2nd International Conference on East Asian Linguistics, Vancouver Peter Svenonius “On the Order of Constituents in the DP”, Workshop on Universal 20, Cambridge Kaori Takamine; Naoyuki Yamato “Object/Event-Denoting Verbal Nouns in the Light Verb Construction in Japanese”, 5th Workshop on Altaic Formal Linguistics, London Tarald Taraldsen “Colonnata and the Syntax/Lexicon Interface”, Workshop on Theoretical Morphology, Grossbothen Øystein A. Vangsnes “On Peripheral Doubling in Scandinavian”, Incontro Grammatica Generativa, Padova Youssef, Islam “Feature Incompatibility Across Place Assimilations: Pharyngealization vs. Palatilization in Cairene Arabic”, 14th Mid-Continental Workshop on Phonology, Minneapolis. Presentations 2008 International conferences & workshops 123 Other presentations 57 Media appearances 14 Total 194 29 Expences Income The Numbers [»n√‚ mb®˘` s] Grant from The Norwegian Research Council of Norway Financing from The University of Tromsø Additional grants (from applications) Other income administrative operational costs SUM Income Incoming balance SUM TOTAL INCOME Academic staff Administrative staff Labor costs Research assistants Conferences and workshops Board meetings Hiring Travel Documentation/info expenses Guest researchers and guest lecturers Various expenses Indirect costs Operational expenses SUM Expenses TOTAL -4 586 000 -3 136 133 0 -240 000 -7 962 133 -1 156 373 -9 118 506 6 026 847 656 459 6 683 306 31 622 217 275 159 393 45 193 859 385 35 282 234 017 183 068 1 345 500 3 110 735 9 794 041 675 535 All numbers in NOK Comments These numbers do not indicate the full scope of the CASTL budget as they do not include aspects of the budget formally administered elsewhere in the Faculty of Humanities. Furthermore, other externally financed projects for which CASTL is responsible are also exclud- ed from the numbers above. A list of research activities which includes projects co-administered by the Faculty of Humanities and CASTL in addition to projects for which CASTL researchers are exclusively responsible is given below: Project Moving Right Along: Expressions of Motion and Location and the Argument Structure of Adpositions CASTL Graduate School – Funding from the University of Tromsø NORMS – Nordic Centre of Excellence in Microcomparative Syntax – NOS-HS Nordic Language Variation Network – Nordforsk (NLVN) The Pieces of Indefinites and the Nature of Cross-Linguistic Variation Network for Saami Documentation and Revitalization Linguistic Inquiry Lule Saami Spoken Dictionary – Funding from Sparebankens gavefond Sum income CASTL related projects Project Coordinator Grant 2008 Peter Svenonius Curt Rice Peter Svenonius Curt Rice Luisa Marti Bruce Morén-Duolljá Curt Rice Bruce Morén-Duolljá 240 250 2 458 876 1 757 240 400 000 801 700 300 000 30 018 250 000 6 238 084 All numbers in NOK 30 CASTL Events [/´»vE‚ nts] Conferences – Workshops – Seminars Pinker Party Tromsø, March 28 Photo: Minjeong Son The University of Tromsø celebrated its 40th anniversary on March 28th, 2008. This milestone included the awarding of an honorary doctorate to Dr. Steven Pinker of Harvard University. Pinker is best known at CASTL for his work on language acquisition. His prominence internationally is based not only on his scientific work, but also on his “ginormous” success in bringing the fields of psychology and linguistics to the general public through such books as The Language Instinct, How the Mind Works, and most recently The Stuff of Thought. This work has made Pinker one of the most eminent intellectuals of our time. CASTL and the Department of Psychology had the pleasure of hosting Professor Pinker in Tromsø for two days in March. In addition to the ceremony, we held a seminar in which three major research projects in Tromsø were connected to Pinker's previous work. This seminar was attended by approximately 200 researchers and students from the university. Bruno Laeng presented some of the Tromsø research on vision as a cognitive system. Marit Westergaard presented a selection of her work on language acquisition, and Peter Svenonius offered new insights into the domain of grammar. Pinker punctuated each talk with a Q&A session with the presenters, teasing out further details of their work, and highlighting in yet another forum his skills as a gifted popularizer of scientific work. Formal Approaches Creole Studies (FACS) Tromsø, November 14-15 Organizers: Marleen van de Vate (CASTL) and Christian Uffman (University of Brighton, formerly CASTL post doctoral research fellow) This conference was aimed at re-establishing the interaction between theoretical and descriptive linguists to revisit some of the earlier claims made about creoles in the theoretically oriented literature. Important research questions targeted by the conference included: the potential contribution that creoles can make to linguistic theory and the related question of whether creoles are a unified and/or special group of languages from a structural perspective. The conference programme included theoretical linguistic papers on creole languages such as Jamaican, Cape Verdean, Mauritian, Gulf of Guinea, and even Afrikaans. While large questions cannot be decisively answered in a small workshop, the event was striking in that most of the phenomena unearthed showed deep commonalities with phenomena discussed and analysed in non-creole languages. One was left with the strong impression that despite the uniqueness of the creole language situation and the similarities across the group, linguistic complexity in creoles was no different nor less rich than one would expect from any natural language. Taraldsen Workshop Tromsø, June 9-10 In 2008, Professor Knut Tarald Taraldsen celebrated his 60th birthday. In honor of the occasion, a workshop was organized and ten leading linguists were invited to contribute papers in theoretical linguistics, Professors Ian Roberts (Cambridge), Maria Rita Manzini (Firenze), Adriana Belletti (Siena), Hilda Koopman (UCLA), Dominique Sportiche (UCLA), Luigi Rizzi (Siena), Edwin Williams (Princeton), Richard S. Kayne (NYU), Anders Holmberg (Newcastle), and Guglielmo Cinque (Venice). The ten invitees all submitted written versions of their papers, which will be published as a festschrift by Oxford University Press. Saami Documentation and Revitalization Workshop Tromsø, February 28-29 51 registered participants from nine countries Coordinated by Bruce Morén-Duolljá (CASTL) and Tove Bull (Department of Language and Linguistics). Keynote presentations: Peter Austin (SOAS-HRELP, London), Michael Riessler (Humboldt University, Berlin), Paul Trilsbeek (MPI for Psycholinguistics), Øystein Vangsnes (University of Tromsø) 31 CASTL Events [/´»vE‚ nts] Conferences – Workshops – Seminars Many of the world’s languages are rapidly losing speakers. This entails the loss of precious cultural heritage, important linguistic information and an irreplaceable record of the richness of the human experience. However, considerable effort is currently underway in many regions to halt language decline and support language revival, and these are sometimes quite successful. Two key components of language maintenance and revitalization seem to be 1) extensive documentation and archiving of multifaceted linguistic data that can be used for a range of purposes, and 2) making sure that the language community plays a central role in language-related projects. The main purpose of this workshop was to discuss Saami language documentation and revitalization, to build a cooperative network of specialists and speech community members, and to develop concrete proposals for joint projects and funding applications. The workshop was a combination of invited speaker presentations, group discussions and selected additional presentations - including a screening of the film “Firekeepers” by Rossella Ragazzi (http://www.nativenetworks.si.edu/Eng/ orange/firekeepers.htm). The workshop led directly to a 3-year NordForsk grant for a project called “Network for Saami Documentation and (Re)vitalization” coordinated by Bruce Morén-Duolljá (CASTL). Bruce Morén-Duolljá, Ove Lorentz, Patrik Bye, and a special guest appearance by Tomas Riad (Stockholm University) Spe Beach Party (workshop & jamboree) Szálka, a picturesque village in the south of Hungary, August 23-24 There were two main purposes for this workshop. The first was to commemorate the fortieth anniversary of one of the most influential books in the field of phonology, the Sound Pattern of English (Chomsky and Halle 1968). The secondary was to strengthen ties between CASTL and the ELTE Theoretical Linguistics Department Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest. There were 23 participants - including, Sylvia Blaho, Bruce Morén-Duolljá and Curt Rice. Sylvia Blaho One-Day Seminar Tromsø, June 5 Speakers: Christian Uffmann, Patrik Bye, Peter Jurgec & Bruce Morén-Duolljá and Dave Odden (Ohio). Curt Rice Celebratory Workshop Tromsø, December 11 The Prosodic Hierarchy PhD Course and Workshop Tromsø, September 1-5 Invited lecturers: Junko Ito and Armin Mester (University of California at Santa Cruz) Registered participants: 31 This course dealt with the structure of the prosodic hierarchy, focusing on two basic issues: • Levels of prosody: What kind of differentiation into genuinely separate prosodic constituents does the cross-linguistic evidence support? To what extent do recent developments in syntactic theory (minimalism, phase theory, etc.) cast new light on the syntax-prosody mapping problem? • Faithfulness to prosody: Which aspects of prosodic structure are targeted by faithfulness constraints? What kinds of shape preservation conditions do we encounter in prosodic morphology? The course ended with a workshop, with the following presenters: Dragana Šurkalović, Patrycja Strycharczuk, 32 Photo: Kristine Nyborg Speakers: Kirsti Koch Christensen, Christin Kristoffersen, Ståle Berglund, Peter Svenonius, Kristine Bentzen, Christian Uffman, David Adger, Bruce Morén-Duolljá, Gillian Ramchand. The CASTL Colloquium Series 2008 The clan of linguists in Tromsø has a hallowed tradition of occasional Thursday evening lectures on topics in linguistics, followed by free-ranging discussion. This is an CASTL Events [/´»vE‚ nts] Conferences – Workshops – Seminars pportunity for us to hear about new and ongoing reo search in the field, straight from the people who are performing it. In addition, it is a forum for us to present our work to colleagues and students. A total of 20 talks were given in 2008, 13 by invited speakers. NORMS Workshops Revisiting Parameters: Holmberg & Platzack (1995) Reloaded Lund, October 16-17 Workshop on Subjects and Architecture of Grammar Trondheim, September 18-19 Organized by Tor A. Åfarli and Mari Nygård Workshop on Auxiliaries and Modality Trondheim, September 17-18 Organized by Kristin M. Eide and Guro Busterud 2008 Grand Meeting for Scandinavian Dialect Syntax Sandbjerg Estate, Sønderborg, Denmark, August 24-28 Dialect Workshop on Faroese The Faroe Islands, August 8-16 Workshop on Root Phenomena and the Left Periphery Tromsø, May 19-20 Organized by Kristine Bentzen and Gunnar Hrafn Hrafnbjargarson Invited speaker: Liliane Haegeman To celebrate the return of the midnight sun, the NORMS workshop on Root Phenomena and the Left Periphery took place in Tromsø, with Liliane Haegeman as our invited speaker. There were talks on various aspects of root phenomena and the left periphery, ranging from more empirically focused talks on V2 in embedded clauses and lack of V2 in main clauses, topicalization, and focalization by Ásgrímur Angantýsson, Marit Julien, Hilde Sollid, and Naoyuki Yamato; doubling by Henrik Rosenkvist and Øystein Vangsnes, and epistemic modality by Kristine Bentzen, Antonio Fabregas, Gunnar Hrafn Hrafnbjargarson, and Naoyuki Yamato, to more theoretical talks on the structural make up and the movement operations occurring in the Left Periphery by Liliane Haegeman and Klaus Abels. Workshop on Negation Oslo, March 11-12 Organized by Eva Engels, Janne B. Johannessen, and Arne Martinus Lindstad Invited speakers: Liliane Haegeman (Lille), Cecilia Poletto (Padua/Venice), Anne Breitbarth (Cambridge), and Jóhannes Gísli Jónsson (Iceland) Workshop on Argument Structure Lund, February 5-6 Organized by Christer Platzack and Mai Tungseth Dialect Workshop on Western Jutlandic Vestjylland: Sevel, Spjald, Harboøre Thorsminde, January 7-11 Organized by Karen Thagaard Hagedorn, Henrik Jørgen sen, and Sten Vikner Photo: Maja Sojtaric Seminar: Typology and Nordic Dialect Variation Helsinki, June 5-6 Organized by Camilla Wide and Pål Kr. Eriksen Invited speakers: Östen Dahl, Kristin Eide, and Johan van der Auwera NLVN – Nordic Language Variation Network Workshop "Expletives as Particles" Helsinki, May 29-30 Organized by Jan-Ola Östman Invited speakers: Tor A. Åfarli, Kari E. Haugland, and Pål Kristian Eriksen 3rd NLVN Training Seminar and NORMS Dialect Workshop Tórshavn, Faroe Islands, August 8-15 Organized by Höskuldur Thráinsson, Thórhallur Eythórsson, Øystein A. Vangsnes, Jógvan í Lon Jacobsen, and Victoria Absalonsen 33 Seminar/PhD course "Phonological Variation and Language Change" Flåm, June 12-16 Organized by FORSE CASTL Guests [»kEsts] CASTL Invited Guests 2008 Adger, David Queen Mary University of London Côté, Marie-Helene University of Ottawa Koopman, Hilda UCLA Rivera-Castillo, Yolanda University of Puerto Rico – Rio Pedras Alexandre, Nelia Universidade de Lisboa Demirdache, Hamida University of Nantes Kornfilt, Jaklin Syracuse University Rizzi, Luigi University of Siena Alleesaib, Muhsina Universite Paris 8 – ZAS Berlin Deprez, Viviane Rutgers/ISC Legate, Julie Anne University of Pennsylvania Roberts, Ian Cambridge University Baptista, Marlyse University of Michigan Downing, Laura ZAS, Berlin Manzini, Rita University of Florence Roeper, Tom University of Massachusettes Belletti, Adriana University of Siena Durrleman, Stephanie University of Geneva Nikiema, Emmanuel University of Toronto Scobbie, James Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh Bendjaballah, Sabrina Université François Rabelais, Tours Hagemeijer, Tjerk Universidade de Lisboa Obata, Miki University of Michigan Sportiche, Dominique UCLA Besten, Johannes den University of Amsterdam Haiden, Martin Université François Rabelais, Tours Odden, David Ohio State University Tarantola, Andrea University of Florence Bhatt, Parth University of Toronto Haïk, Isabelle Université de Caen Pinker, Steven Harvard University Taylor, Ann University of York Borik, Olga Universidade Nova de Lisboa Holmberg, Anders University of Newcastle Pintzuk, Susan University of York Uffmann, Christian University of Sussex Braithwaite, Benjamin University of the West Indies Kihm, Alain Centre national de la recherché scientifique Paris Pratas, Fernanda Universidade Nova de Lisboa Veenstra, Tonjes ZAS, Berlin Guest Researchers/Students 2008 Cognola, Federica Universitá de Padova 06.08.2008 – 09.12.2008 Lahne, Antje University of Leipzig 09.04.2008 – 28.04.2008 34 Petya Rácz, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest Serrano, Silvia Universida Autónoma de Madrid 12.10.2008 – 22.12.2008 Snarska, Anna Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznan 12.02.2008 – 12.05.2008 Photo from the NORMS trip to the Faroe Islands for the ”Dialect Workshop on Faroese”. Photo: Tania Strahan Greetings from CASTL visitors 2008 The highlight of my visit to Tromsø was spending a day with Curt and Tove Rice [Dahl], chatting about linguistics and peace studies while photographing fishing villages and snow-capped mountains. At CASTL I had the chance to chat and talk to bright, vigorous, committed theoretical linguists who are among the rare group that have a real understanding of the connection between linguistic theory and language acquisition. Steven Pinker, Harvard University Tom Roeper, UMass You may view Pinker’s pictures of the Tromsø area at http://pinker.wjh. harvard.edu/photos/Norway/index.htm At CASTL I participated in a very inspiring meeting for a great linguist in unforgettable sunny nights, where even ideas look clearer. Adriana Belletti, University of Siena – speaker at the Tarald Taraldsen celebratory workshop. CASTL is a great scientific environment, pretty much unique in Europe for linguistic research. CASTL is a very dynamic research environment in theoretical linguistics. One of the two or three top places in Europe. Dominique Sportiche, UCLA CASTL is one of the most interesting programs anywhere in Linguistics, with devoted, intelligent and knowledgeable linguists who are very serious about their research and also very open to discussions. Jaklin Kornfilt, Syracuse University, NY Luigi Rizzi, University of Siena At CASTL they work the way we would all like to work - in an environment completely dedicated to a cutting-edge research pursuit - able to support a variety of projects within it and to involve younger researchers as well as older and established ones. The highlight of my stay in Tromsø this time was not only that we resolved the long-standing question of phonological voicing in singleton obstruents (they are voiceless!), we also developed a stunningly better formal analysis of consonant gradation, and managed to dispose of underlying vowel length to boot. Rita Manzini, University of Florence. David Odden, Ohio State University 35 LU N D B LA D ME D IA A S Head of Administration: Tore B. Bentz ([email protected]) Higher Executive Officer: Torill Sommerlund ([email protected]) Director: Professor Marit Westergaard ([email protected]) Center for Advanced Study in Theoretical Linguistics Faculty of Humanities University of Tromsø 9037 Tromsø Norway http://castl.uit.no/