LINGUIST List 33.3721
Sun Dec 04 2022
Summer Schools: Applications of Game Theory in the Study of Language / France
Editor for this issue: Sarah Goldfinch <sgoldfinchlinguistlist.org>
Date: 28-Nov-2022
From: Christina Pawlowitsch <christina.pawlowitsch
u-paris2.fr>
Subject: Applications of Game Theory in the Study of Language / France
E-mail this message to a friend Host Institution:
Website: https://game-theory.u-paris2.fr/WS2023-call.html
Dates: 15-Jun-2023 - 16-Jun-2023
Location: Paris, Ile de France, France
Focus: Game theory, interdisciplinary exchange, philosophy of language, semantics, sociolinguistics
Minimum Education Level: MA
Description:
Signaling games have been extensively studied by game theorists — be it in the form of costly signaling, cheap talk, Bayesian persuasion, etc. In exploring these models, game theorists and economists frequently touch on questions traditionally treated in linguistics, and they have, from time to time, also ventured into linguistic interpretations of these models. In linguistics, more recently, researchers have turned to game theory and modeling frameworks bearing similarities to methods used in game theory (such as the Rational Speech Act model) to study questions in semantics and pragmatics. The aim of this workshop is to enhance the exchange between these two research communities.
Registration: 29-Nov-2022 to 31-May-2023
Contact Person: Christina Pawlowitsch
Email: christina.pawlowitsch
u-paris2.fr
Apply by Email: christina.pawlowitsch
u-paris2.fr
Registration Instructions:
Call for contributions Notably encouraged are: — linguistic assessments or applications of costly signaling, cheap talk, Bayesian persuasion, or other models that have been studied in game theory; — game-theoretic treatments of problems that have been formulated in the context of established research programs in linguistics (such as, scalar implicatures, vagueness, slurs, etc.); — conceptual reflections on the interaction of game theory and the study of language; — concept and category formation; — game-theoretic assessments of the Rational Speech Act model; — formal models of dialogues and linguistic interpretations of Bayesian dialogues. How to apply: If you would like to give a talk at this event, please send an extended abstract of your presentation to: christina.pawlowitsch
u-paris2.fr, not later than January 16, 2023. Program Committee: Andreas Blume Paul Egré Christina Pawlowitsch Benjamin Spector We will notify applicants about the acceptance of their presentation by February 28, 2023.
Page Updated: 04-Dec-2022