News
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November 21, 2023
Member Spotlight: Walter Sena
Walter Sena is a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of British Columbia.
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November 2, 2023Timing of Perioral Muscle Suppression in Smiled Speech: Best Student Presentation Award at AWC
Congratulations to Yadong Liu, a PhD student in the Department of Linguistics and member of Language Sciences at UBC, for earning the Best Student P
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November 2, 2023LLED Faculty Members Recognized As World's Top 2% Most-Cited Linguists
Congratulations to faculty members of Language & Literacy Education Dr. Ron Darvin, Dr.
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September 27, 2023UBC Computer Science researchers receive Outstanding Paper Award for advanced solution to abusive language detection
This article was developed by UBC Computer Science and has been re-posted by Language Sciences.
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September 18, 2023Call for Abstracts: AeroDigest 2023 Symposium
AeroDigest 2023 Symposium is coming up on October 14 - October 15, 2023, and we want your abstracts!
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September 14, 2023Call for Funding Requests!
Language Sciences has funding available for member projects!
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September 10, 2023Sensorimotor Foundations of Speech Perception in Infancy: Q&A with Dr. Janet Werker & Dr. Henny Yeung
The perceptual system for speech is highly organized from early infancy. This organization bootstraps young human learners’ ability to acquire their native speech and language from speech input.
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September 10, 2023Arts Perspectives on AI: Fearing (your own) Language in the Age of Artificial Intelligence by Dr. David Gramling & Matthew Chan
Written by Dr. David Gramling (he/they), professor and head of the Department of Central, Eastern, and Northern European Studies, and Matthew Chan, third-year undergraduate student in Arts.
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August 8, 2023Learning the Character Inventories of Undeciphered Scripts Using Unsupervised Deep Clustering: Q&A with the Research Team
In the study, 'Learning the Character Inventories of Undeciphered Scripts Using Unsupervised Deep Clustering’, researchers Logan Born, PhD Student in Simon Fraser University's School of Computing Science,
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August 8, 2023Children Dynamically Update and Extend the Interface Between Number Words and Perceptual Magnitudes: Q&A with Denitza Dramkin
As adults, we represent and think about number, space, and time in at least two ways: our intuitive—but imprecise—perceptual representations, and the slowly learned—but precise—number words. With development, these representational formats interface, allowing us to use precise number words to estimate imprecise perceptual experiences.