Previous events
Vivian Zhang from Cornell University presents her research on how caregiver-infant turn-taking facilitates communicative development
Ron Darvin (University of British Columbia, Canada) discusses how applied linguistics research can address the compelling issues of language, technology and identity that confront us in the age of AI
Master Nuranindia Endah Arum at the Department of Linguistics and Scandinavian Studies will defend her dissertation Language learning, migration, and professional trajectories. Experiences of highly educated Indonesians in Norway for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor (PhD).
Language and Cognition Forum is happy to announce that PhD student Akvile Sinkevičiūtė (Northeastern University London ) will present her work on bilinguals' colour discrimination at Henrik Wergelands House on June 14th.
Five MA students in Multilingualism will present the results of their psycholinguistic projects as part of the MULTI4150 - Project-based Research in Multilingualism course.
One-day course for the PhD Week at the Faculty of Humanities.
The aim of this course is to boost methodological reflection on various forms of translation that take place in humanistic research. What are the possibilities of translatability, and which are the pitfalls?
Are you considering to use eye-tracking in your MA-thesis, or just interested in exciting technologies and how they can be used in cognitive research? EyeHub is organizing an introductory workshop to eye-tracking led by Camilo Rodriguez Ronderos.
Researcher skills: Crafting Compelling Narratives, Designing Impactful Slides, and Delivering Convincing Talks
Sverre Stausland will present his research on the origin of the word ordskifte
Master Hanna Solberg Andresen at the Department of Linguistics and Scandinavian Studies will defend her dissertation With bilingual eyes. Bilingual Norwegian-English children and the question of language-specific conceptualization for the degree of Philosophiae Doctor (PhD).
Professor James Kirby from LMU Munich will present his research on perceptual similarity and acoustic variability as filters on tonal variation and change
Iida Pöllänen (University of Tampere) will present her current postdoctoral research about the Ibsen legacy in the Harlem Renaissance.
Judith Jesch (University of Nottingham) will present her research on Orkneyinga saga in the fifth edition of the Sophus Bugge Lecture series.
Carmen Sumillera Iglesias presents the outline and methodology of her PhD project about South African language policies in higher education.
Ilaria Marazzina will present her ongoing Master's project on first language use in second language teaching.
In this EyeHub Forum, Claire Prendergast (Postdoc at IFIKK) will present a research project exploring how well children predict the outcome of kindergarden stories that are updated by idiomatic expressions through picture selection of the story outcomes.
Nele Põldvere and Elizaveta Kibisova present their research on the grammatical differences between fake and genuine news in English and Russian.
Hanna Andresen presents parts of her PhD project and discusses the significance of investigating bilingual children's conceptualization.
Aleksandra Ita Olszewska and Toril Opsahl present a narrative study of Polish migrant workers’ lived experiences at the intersection of linguistic racism and Whiteness, organized by the Multilingualism Research Forum
In this extraordinary EyeHub lecture, Jochen Laubrock (Research Scientist at the University of Potsdam) will present recent research that addresses how ongoing higher-level cognitive processes guide the prediction of where to attend during reading and scene perception.
In this EyeHub Forum Line Sjøtun Helganger (PhD Fellow at the University of South-Eastern Norway) will present a study investigating the developmental trajectory of Norwegian 3- to 5-year-olds’ sensitivity to intonational cues in utterances containing også.
EyeHub, in collaboration with the Language Research Forum, is delighted to announce that Professor Debra Titone (McGill University, Department of Psychology) will give an extraordinary talk at Henrik Wergelands house March 15th.
EyeHub, in collaboration with the Language Research Forum, is delighted to announce that Professor Debra Titone (McGill University, Department of Psychology) will give an extraordinary talk at Henrik Wergelands house March 15th.