May 2024
I have lots of upcoming talks in May and July: 14 May at Queen Mary (London), 21 May at UCL (London), 13 July at the University of Edinburgh and 24-27 July at CogSci (Rotterdam). Check them out here.
March 2024
We were awarded a British Academy/Leverhulme Small Research Grant to expand our work on the project Generics Across Languages and cover even more languages! The funding will start in May 2024 and will last for two years. Spring pleasures!
February 2024
We will be giving a talk at the 4th European Experimental Philosophy Conference in May/June!
January 2024
I got some pump-priming funding (Annual Adventures in Research Grant at the University of East Anglia) to develop the Generics toolkit and test it in 5 additional languages (February 2024-July 2025) as part of the Generics Across Languages project. The joy!
November 2023
Our paper ‘Verbal fluency in Greek: Performance differences between L1Greek-L2English late bilingual and Greek monolingual speakers’ with Artemis Alexiadou has been accepted for publication at Bilingualism: Language and Cognition. Stay tuned!
September 2023
Looking forward to seeing some of you at XPragX in Paris. I present our poster ‘Reasoning with polysemes: When default inferences beat contextual information’ on Day 1. Full program here.
Our abstract ‘The well-defined kind restriction: experimental evidence from Greek, German and Catalan’ with Artemis Alexiadou and Elena Castroviejo-Miró got accepted as a talk at ‘The spectrum of kinds’, Workshop at the Annual Meeting of German Society for Linguistics – DGfS to take place in Bochum 28 February-1 March 2024.
July 2023
We got some pump-priming funding from the John Fell Fund at the University of Oxford to pilot the Generics Across Languages project in 5 languages (August 2023-February 2024). Stay tuned!
June 2023
We are going to be presenting our work from the Experimental Argument Analysis (EAA) project at the following conferences: RaAM 16, ESPP 2023 and XPragX. See you there!
October 2022
After a short hiatus on a research admin position, I am back in full-time research. The joy! I started a position as a (named) Senior Research Associate at the University of East Anglia working on “Experimental argument analysis: Reasoning with stereotypes” (PI: Eugen Fischer, Co-I: Paul Engelhardt). The project is funded by the Fritz Thyssen Foundation. See more info here.
I am also still an affiliated lecturer at the Department of Theoretical and Applied Linguistics at the University of Cambridge.
September 2019
2019 is proving to be a prolific year: two more papers accepted/out!
Our paper (with Esther de Leeuw, Linnaea Stockall and Celia Gorba Masip Celia) ‘Illusory vowels in Spanish-English late bilinguals: Evidence that accurate L2 perception is neither necessary nor sufficient for accurate L2 production’ has been accepted for publication in Second Language Research.
Our paper (with Napoleon Katsos and Linnaea Stockall) ‘Experimental evidence on genericity and universal quantification in Greek and English’ has been published at the ICGL13 Proceedings.
August 2019
Our paper (with Napoleon Katsos and Linnaea Stockall) ‘Generalising about striking properties: do glippets love to play with fire?’ has been accepted in Frontiers in Psychology | Language Sciences. Check it out here.
July 2019
Our paper (with Artemis Alexiadou) on ‘Genericity in Greek: an experimental investigation’ has been published online at the Proceedings of Linguistic Evidence 2018. Check it out here.
April 2019
Our paper (with Linnaea Stockall and Napoleon Katsos) on generics, universals, context and quantifier domain restriction has been accepted in the Journal of Semantics – stay tuned and read it here.
March 2019
My chapter on ‘Genericity’ just got published in the ‘Experimental Semantics and Pragmatics’ Handbook at Oxford University Press.
January 2019
I am excited to be giving a talk at the MEITS Multilingualism Seminar at the University of Cambridge on the 17th January.
July 2018
I am an invited speaker at the next Semantics and Philosophy in Europe Colloquium, SPE10 in December in Barcelona. Looking forward to seeing old and new faces!
July 2018
The second phase of data collection for the project on language attrition/bilingualism is almost complete!
June 2018
I presented a poster of our child generics data (with Napoleon Katsos and Linnaea Stockall) at the Child Language Symposium in Reading: The acquisition of striking generics: do glippets love to play with fire?
February 2018
I have completed the first phase of data collection for the project on language attrition/bilingualism with L1-Greek L2-English speakers in London and I am currently planning the second phase with monolingual speakers in Greece.
December 2017
Two upcoming presentations of a new research collaboration with Artemis Alexiadou ‘Genericity in Greek: an experimental investigation’: an alternate talk at the “Specificity, definiteness and article systems across languages” workshop at DGfS 2018 in Stuttgart and a poster presentation at Linguistic Evidence 2018 in Tübingen.
November 2017
Stimulating first meeting of the OASIS network in Paris, an international research network and annual interdisciplinary conference on formal semantic ontology in natural language as it is structured by both grammar and cognition.
We are organising a related workshop in Berlin in 11-12 January 2018 themed around ‘Nominal phrase meaning’. More info here.
October 2017
I am excited to have started the first stage of data collection in London for a new project on language attrition/bilingualism. The project looks at L1 attrition in Greek speakers in the UK who have been exposed to L2 English for a long period of time. More details to follow.
May 2017
I am excited to be organising a workshop on genericity in Berlin on 2 June 2017. See more details here.
April 2017
Two new presentations of our genericity project with Linnaea Stockall and Napoleon Katsos, both in London. At the CogSci 2017 Meeting in July and at ICGL13 Conference in September. See more details here.
February 2017
Our paper with Linnaea Stockall and Napoleon Katsos ‘A new look at the ‘Generic Overgeneralisation’ effect’ has been published (online first). You can read it here.
February 2017
We are organising the 1st Conference on Interdisciplinary Approaches to Linguistic Theory (CIALT 1) in collaboration with the Linguistics Division (Dpt. of Philology) at the University of Crete.
We invite submissions for abstracts dealing with “Theoretical and applied methods for evaluating (a)-typical language”. 6-8 October, Rethymno, Crete. For more information go here.
November 2016
Our paper with Linnaea Stockall and Napoleon Katsos ‘Generic and universally quantified generalisations: a cross-linguistic experimental study in English and Greek’ got accepted for presentation at the “Cross-Linguistic Pragmatics” workshop organised by XPRAG.de at ZAS in Berlin on 25-27 January 2017.
November 2016
Our paper with Linnaea Stockall and Napoleon Katsos ‘A new look at the Generic Overgeneralisation effect’ will appear on Inquiry: An interdisciplinary Journal of philosophy in a Special Issue: Genericity in philosophy and linguistics edited by Bernhard Nickel and Rachel Sterken. See a preprint here.
October 2016
I joined Artemis Alexiadou’s research group on (Experimental) Syntax and Heritage Languages at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin.
May 2016
Two presentations on our generics child study coming up at Queen Mary and the University of Cambridge: “On borps and glippets: the acquisition of generics.”
18-20 January 2016
Poster on “The effect of context on generic and quantificational statements” with Napoleon Katsos and Linnaea Stockall, Workshop “Trends in Experimental Pragmatics TiXPrag 1”, ZAS Berlin
20 September 2015
Upcoming presentation at the ‘Generic workshop: genericity in philosophy and linguistics’ organized by Rachel Sterken, Bernhard Nickel and Torfinn Huvenes at Harvard University in early October. I will present a paper on ‘The Effect of Context on Generic and Quantificational Generalisations’ written with my collaborators Linnaea Stockall and Napoleon Katsos. More info and the full programme here.
4 August 2015
Upcoming paper with Napoleon Katsos and Linnaea Stockall on ‘Genericity is easy? Formal and experimetal perspectives’ to appear in RATIO Special Issue: Investigating Meaning: Experimental Approaches, edited by Nat Hansen and Emma Borg.
Read RATIO submitted.
May 2015
How to be a bare noun in Greek
LSD 2 (London Semantics Day)
13 May
Queen Mary, University of London
10 November 2014
Talk at the University of Cambridge
Wednesday 19 November 2014
Bare nouns in Greek: the view from Spanish and Catalan
Ibero-Romance Linguistics Seminars
20 April 2014
A new collaboration between Queen Mary and the University of Cambridge!
Linnaea Stockall, Napoleon Katsos (University of Cambridge) and myself have been awarded a British Academy research grant (2014-15) for the project ‘Learning about the world through generic statements: a cross-linguistic perspective’, where we will explore how adult native speakers of two languages with distinct ways of expressing generic statements, English and Greek, process statements like ‘tigers have stripes’ or ‘ducks lay eggs’ and how young native speakers of English learn their meaning. Read the abstract here GEN_website.
1 January 2014
This semester I am going to be a teaching assistant for two modules at Queen Mary, University of London:
‘Aspects of Meaning’ taught by Paul Elbourne and ‘Language acquisition’ taught by Linnaea Stockall.
14 August 2013
I will be teaching again an “Introduction to formal semantics” at ACTL this autumn!
Our paper with L.Stockall “Are (all) generics easy? Processing generic and universal interpretations” has been accepted as a talk at the conference “Investigating semantics: Empirical and philosophical approaches” (Bochum, October 10-12, 2013).
22 July 2013
Our paper with S.Alexandropoulou ‘A corpus study of Greek bare singulars: implications for an analysis’ has been just published in Revista da ABRALIN within a thematic issue of work presented at the conference “Weak (In)Defi niteness and Referentiality” (Florianópolis, August 20 and 21, 2012).
I am a research assistant in the project ‘Is earlier always better? Factors affecting bilingual speech perception and production’, a project co-ordinated by Esther de Leeuw and Linnaea Stockall and funded by the British Academy. The project explores perception and production of a phonotactic contrast across a range of Spanish-English bilingual speakers to examine the degree to which degree of exposure and age of exposure to a second language affect proficiency.
I co-supervised (w. Bert LeBruyn) Stavroula Alexandropoulou’s MA thesis “The lexical restrictions on verbs with bare nominal complements in Greek and an analysis of such constructions with have-verbs”, Utrecht Institute of Linguistics OTS.