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Deadline extension to 14th Jan: CL 2015

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Deadlines of CL2015 have been extended to 14th January.

Corpus Linguistics 2015: In honour of the life and work of Geoffrey Leechhttp://ucrel.lancs.ac.uk/cl2015

Final Call for Papers and Pre-Conference Workshops

Updated: deadline extension to 14th January

The eighth international Corpus Linguistics conference (CL2015) will be held at Lancaster

University from Tuesday 21st July 2015 to Friday 24th July 2015. The main conference will

be preceded by a workshop day on Monday 20th July.

This series of conferences began in 2001 with an event celebrating the career of Professor

Geoffrey Leech, on the occasion of his retirement. In August of 2014, we reported with great

sadness Geoff's sudden death.

By dedicating this eighth conference in the Corpus Linguistics series once again to a

celebration of Geoff's life, his career, and his truly remarkable influence on the field, we once

more pay tribute to, and commemorate, a remarkable intellect and a sorely-missed colleague

and friend.

Conference themes and topics

The goals of the conference are:

*       To gather together current and developing research in the study and application of

corpus linguistics;

*       To push the field forwards by promoting dialogue among the many different users of

corpora across interconnected sub-disciplines of linguistics - be they descriptive,

theoretical, applied or computational;

*       To explore new challenges both within corpus linguistics, and in the extension of

corpus approaches to new fields of study.

CL2015 will have three thematic streams and a general programme.

Stream A: A tribute to Geoffrey Leech

For this stream we invite contributions using corpus methods in any of the branches of

linguistics with which Geoffrey Leech's research was especially closely associated, namely:

*       Pragmatics

*       Stylistics

*       Description of English grammar and grammatical change

*       Grammatical annotation of corpus texts

Stream B: Discourse, Politics and Society

For this stream we invite contributions in the following areas:

*       The use of corpora in discourse analysis

*       Corpus approaches to the study of new media

*       Applications of corpus approaches in the social sciences and humanities

Stream C: Language learning and teaching

For this stream we invite contributions in the following areas:

*       Learner corpus research

*       Corpus-based work in English language teaching, including ESP and EAP

*       Use of corpora in second language acquisition studies

*       Data-driven learning

*       Development of learner materials

General Programme

For the general programme, we invite contributions on as broad and inclusive a basis as

possible. The areas in which we particularly welcome submissions include but are not limited

to:

*       Corpus methodology:

o       Critical explorations of existing measures and methods in corpus linguistics;

o       New methods and techniques in corpus development, annotation and analysis;

o       New tools and techniques developed in corpus-based computational

linguistics;

o       Advances in quantitative techniques.

*       Theoretical corpus linguistics:

o       The interface between corpus and linguistic theory;

o       Syntax, morphology, semantics;

o       Psycholinguistic and cognitive explorations;

o       Multi-lingual comparative and contrastive analysis;

o       Historical linguistics.

*       Lexis and lexicon:

o       Lexicography;

o       Collocation and meaning in context.

*       Sociolinguistics, language variation and applied linguistics:

o       Regional and social variation in language;

o       Code-switching and bilingualism;

o       Forensic linguistics;

o       Genre, register and textual variation.

Plenary speakers

We are delighted to announce that the following speakers have accepted our invitation to give

plenary lectures at CL2015:

*       Douglas Biber (Northern Arizona University, USA)

*       Sylviane Granger (Université catholique de Louvain, Belgium)

*       Michaela Mahlberg (University of Nottingham, UK)

*       Alan Partington (Università di Bologna, Italy)

Call for pre-conference workshops

As noted above, CL2015 will include a workshop day on Monday 20th July 2015. We hereby

issue a call for workshop proposals on any theme relevant to the conference.

"Workshops" may take two main forms.

The first type is the colloquium-style workshop, which operates as a mini-conference with its

own programme committee and call for papers to be presented: proposals for this type of

workshop should specify the scope of the workshop, who its organisers will be, and whether

the creation of workshop proceedings is envisaged. Proposals should also provide an initial

version of the text of the call for papers.

The other main type of workshop is a practical or applied workshop providing a

demonstration of or training in some particular corpus linguistic technique or piece of

software. In this case the proposal must explain the content of the workshop, provide an

initial version of the text of a call for participation, and give an indication of the workshop's

IT requirements, if any.

We are also happy to consider innovative forms of workshop intermediate between

colloquium-style workshop and practical workshop.

All proposals must in addition specify the proposed running time. Our timetable allows for

the following lengths of workshop:

*       Full-day workshop - up to 7 hours (plus lunch/breaks)

*       Half-day workshop - up to 3.5 hours (plus break)

*       Short workshop - up to 2 hours (single session)

There is no fixed format for workshop proposals, as long as they include all the details

specified above. Proposals should be sent by email to Andrew Hardie

< a.hardie@lancaster.ac.uk> by 14th January (extended deadline). We are happy to respond

to informal expressions of interest in advance of formal submission of a proposal.

Call for papers, posters and panels

We invite submission of abstracts for papers, posters and panels on any topic relevant to the

conference themes.

For this conference, we are requesting extended abstracts (750-1500 words), as we do not

plan to produce a volume of conference proceedings. All abstracts will be peer-reviewed by

the conference programme committee.

Paper presentations will consist of a 20 minute talk followed by 10 minutes for questions

and discussion. Please note: paper submissions should present either complete research, or

research in progress where at least some substantial results have been achieved. Work in

progress which has yet to produce results can instead be submitted as a poster abstract.

Submissions for panel discussions should take the form of a single 1500 word abstract on

behalf of all speakers to be on the panel. The abstract should include a note to specify

whether the panel is intended to be 1 hour or 1.5 hours in length.

Submissions for poster presentations should be shorter (400-750 words). We especially

welcome poster abstracts that (a) report on innovative research that is in its very earliest

phases (b) report on new software or corpus data resources.

We especially encourage abstract submissions from early-career researchers, including

postgraduate research students and postdoctoral researchers.

All abstracts must be submitted via the conference website; the submission system is now

live (seehttp://ucrel.lancs.ac.uk/cl2015/call.php). Details on how to submit an abstract to a

specific conference stream are available on the website.

Key dates

*       End October 2014 - call for papers; call for proposals for pre-conference workshops

*       14th January 2015 - extended final deadline for abstract submission

*       16th January 2015 - earlybird registration opens

*       31st January 2015 - all abstract review outcomes will be returned by this date

*       30th March 2015 - end of earlybird registration (rates rise)

*       21st June 2015 - end of main registration (late registration not guaranteed, though

      we'll try)

*       21st June 2015 - final deadline for cancellation with refund of registration fees

*       20th July 2015 - pre-conference workshop day

*       21st July to 24th July 2015 - main conference

General information

For information on registration, accommodation travel etc., see the conference website:

http://ucrel.lancs.ac.uk/cl2015; email:cl2015@lancaster.ac.uk

The conference is hosted by the UCREL research centre (http://ucrel.lancs.ac.uk), which

brings together the Department of Linguistics and English Language

(http://www.ling.lancs.ac.uk/) with the School of Computing and Communications

(http://www.scc.lancs.ac.uk/).

Local organising committee of CL 2015: Andrew Hardie (chair), Tony McEnery, Paul

Rayson.