LINGUIST List 19.2296
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Fri Jul 18 2008
Confs: Neurolinguistics, Psycholinguistics/USA
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1. Whitney Anne
Postman-Caucheteux,
Saffran Cognitive Neuroscience Conference
Message 1: Saffran Cognitive Neuroscience Conference
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Date: 18-Jul-2008
From: Whitney Anne Postman-Caucheteux <wpostman temple.edu>
Subject: Saffran Cognitive Neuroscience Conference
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Saffran Cognitive Neuroscience Conference Date: 12-Sep-2008 - 12-Sep-2008 Location: Philadelphia, USA Contact: Nadine Martin Contact Email: nmartin temple.edu Meeting URL: http://www.temple.edu/chp/departments/commsci/documents/3rdAnnualSaffranConference-SavetheDateFlyer-2008.pdf Linguistic Field(s): Neurolinguistics; Psycholinguistics Meeting Description: The Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders at Temple University and the Philadelphia Neuropsychology Society are pleased to present the 3rd Annual Eleanor M. Saffran Cognitive Neuroscience Conference. Dr. Eleanor M. Saffran was one of the pioneers of Cognitive Neuropsychology with a career spanning some 35 years. Two remarkable features of Eleanor's career were the diversity of topics she researched and her extraordinary ability to focus on the most intriguing aspects of a problem. Eleanor's research led to important developments in our understanding and treatment of agrammatism, deep dyslexia, word deafness, short-term memory deficits, word production, sentence processing, semantics, and visual cognition. The theme of this year's conference, language processing in the multilingual brain, is timely and in keeping with the growing need to meet the language rehabilitation needs of a diverse population. Moreover, the study of language processing in the multilingual brain will undoubtedly contribute insights into theories of language processing that are not otherwise evident. The papers presented in this conference approach this topic from several perspectives, looking at neurological underpinnings, language acquisition, developmental and acquired disorders. This conference will offer an excellent forum for information exchange and discussion of clinical and theoretical issues pertaining to language in the multilingual brain. Each presentation will be followed by a fifteen minute question and answer session and there will be additional opportunities for discussion during the breaks and reception. Sponsored by the Eleanor M. Saffran Center for Cognitive Neuroscience of the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, College of Health Professions, Temple University and Philadelphia Neuropsychology Society. Date: Friday, September 12th, 2008 Time: Registration begins at 8:15am Conference from 8:30am to 5:00pm Reception from 5:15 to 6:30pm Location: Conference - Howard Gittis Student Center- South Room 200 13th Street between Cecil B. Moore & Montgomery Ave. Conference Proceedings 8:15 Registration and Continental Breakfast 9:00 - 9:15 Welcome Nadine Martin, Ph.D., Temple University 9:15 - 10:15 Trilingual Agrammatism Loraine Obler, Ph.D., Speech-Language-Hearing Sciences, The City University of New York Mira Goral, Ph.D., Speech-Language-Hearing Sciences, Lehman College Participants will be able to describe factors posited to distinguish trilingualism from bilingualism. Participants will able to present the arguments for the effects on language performance of age of learning a given language, degrees of recovery and use of that language, and shared lexical items across languages. Participants will be able to demonstrate understanding of the ramifications for a third language of therapy in a second language. 10:15 - 11:15 Age of acquisition and language proficiency in the bilingual brain Arturo Hernandez, Ph.D., Department of Psychology, University of Houston -Participants will demonstrate knowledge of the factors that modulate neural activity in speakers of a second language. Participants will be able to describe how age of acquisition plays a role in both monolingual and bilingual language processing. Participants will be able to state how functional magnetic resonance imaging data are acquired and analyzed. 11:15 - 11:30 Coffee Break 11:30 - 12:30 Lexical organization and competition in first and second languages: Computational and neural perspectives Ping Li, Ph.D., Department of Psychology and Program in Linguistics, Pennsylvania State University -Participants will be able to identify language and its subcomponents as dynamical, interactive, systems in which multiple variables and principles are at work simultaneously to determine language learning outcomes as well as their developmental profiles. -Participants will be able to describe how computational models allow researchers to understand learning dynamics that behavioral studies cannot easily do. -Participants will be able to state how neuroimaging techniques (fMRI and ERP) allow for an inner view of how two languages are processed and represented by one brain. 12:30 - 1:30 Lunch 1:30 - 2:30 Language Proficiency and Phonological Skills in Bilingual Children Brian Goldstein, Ph.D., Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Temple University -Participants will be able to describe models of language representation in bilinguals. -Participants will be able to identify how factors of language proficiency relate to phonological skills in bilingual children. -Participants will be able to link models of language representation and factors of language proficiency to clinical practice with bilingual children. 2:30 - 3:30 ''Specific'' Language Impairment and Children Learning a Second Language Kathryn Kohnert, Ph.D., Department of Speech-Language-Hearing Sciences, University of Minnesota -Participants will able to describe practical and theoretical issues that motivate study at the intersection of second language (L2) acquisition and developmental language impairment (LI). -Participants will be able to explain inadequacies of traditional language-based comparisons for identifying LI in children learning an L2. -Participants will be able to identify critical results from experimental measures that compare LI and L2 performance using alternative measures. 3:30 - 3:45 Coffee Break 3:45 - 4:45 Bilingual Aphasia: Factors Affecting Recovery and Rehabilitation Swathi Kiran, Ph.D., Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of Texas at Austin -Participants will be able to identify effects of various factors such as pre-stroke language proficiency and age of acquisition on lexical processing skills in bilingual aphasia. -Participants will be able to recognize fMRI findings of lexical semantic processing skills in normal bilingual individuals. -Participants will be able to list the results of semantic based treatment to facilitate cross language generalization in patients with bilingual aphasia. 5:00 - 6:30 Reception
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