AIS: IZA SOLA-LLONCH
Zoomhttps://ucla.zoom.us/j/98856740002?pwd=V1lFbHExeUEwQjlPeTB1a3oybGM5QT09Passcode: 427872
Syntax-Semantics Seminar
Must be enrolled to attend. 1/5 and 1/12 will be via zoom. Future event locations TBA.
LING 264: 264: Joint Psycholinguistics / Computational Seminar
Campbell Hall 2122A/BWe're continuing the combined computational andpsycholinguistics seminar this quarter; areas include language acquisition,computational psycholinguistics, language processing, and others inexperimental and computational linguistics. Anyone interested in these areasand their intersection is invited to attend. We meet weekly on Thursdays 4-5:30 PM. The schedule isentirely open and can be found here.Our firstmeeting will be an organizational meeting this Thursday,...
Faculty Meeting – personnel actions
Campbell Hall 2122A/Bsearch
AIS: HILDA KOOPMAN
Zoomhttps://ucla.zoom.us/j/98856740002?pwd=V1lFbHExeUEwQjlPeTB1a3oybGM5QT09Passcode: 427872
LING 264: 264: Joint Psycholinguistics / Computational Seminar
Campbell Hall 2122A/BWe're continuing the combined computational andpsycholinguistics seminar this quarter; areas include language acquisition,computational psycholinguistics, language processing, and others inexperimental and computational linguistics. Anyone interested in these areasand their intersection is invited to attend. We meet weekly on Thursdays 4-5:30 PM. The schedule isentirely open and can be found here.Our firstmeeting will be an organizational meeting this Thursday,...
Talk with Colloquium speaker: Bob Frank
Conference Room 2122A/BAll members of the Linguistics Department are invited to a bonus talk with Bob Frank about the "Ways of using generative capacity and other formal properties of grammars to assess different varieties of neural networks."
Bob Frank (Yale) – computational, syntax
Haines 118Linguistic Productivity in Neural Networks: Representation and Inductive BiasA fundamental fact about human language is its productivity: speakers are able to understand and produce forms different from those that they have previously encountered. Linguists typically account for this fact by positing abstract grammars that characterize structural representations for an infinity of possible forms. At the...
Colloquium Speaker-Bob Frank (Yale)
Haines 118computational, syntax