Jana Willer Gold and Anita Peti-Stantić, two researchers from the MEGACRO project, will present their work on “Aux Clitic Drop in Object Clauses: Interaction of Person, Gender and Case” on the 17th of September.
Professor Anita Peti-Stantić, the leader of the MEGACRO project, and members of the MEGACRO research group Jelena Tušek, PhD and Irina Masnikosa, MA will participate in a panel discussion on the 2019 ASEEESSummer Convention in Zagreb on 15 June.
The chair and the discussant of the Saturday session on the Universality of Semantic Categories across Languages and Methodologies: Concreteness and Imageability is professor Mateusz Milan Stanojević.
The panel discussion will be held in the room A123 at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences in Zagreb, starting at 9 a.m.
Jana Willer-Gold will present the results of her cooperation with Ana Matić, Marijan Palmović (Faculty of Education and Rehabilitation Sciences) and Anita Peti-Stantić, MEGAHR project leader at the Conference Neuroscience of Language in Abu Dhabi, UAE on Tuesday, the 23rd of April 2019. The researchers have studied how Croatian Conjunct Agreement Preferences Disambiguate Relative Clause Antecedent.
Prof. Anita Peti-Stantić will give an invited lecture at the UCL (University College London) titled “Concreteness and imageability at the interface of linguistics and psychology“. The lecture will be given at one of the Linglunches on February 26th, 2019 in Room 101- Chandler House starting at 12:30. Linglunches are a series of lectures open to all linguistic topics which provide an opportunity for UCL staff and guest researchers to present their work to interested audience.
We hereby announce the following MEGACRO project activity – a workshop on Methodology and ethics of empirical research in humanities and social sciences. The workshop will be held at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences in Zagreb (council room). It is aimed at all MEGACRO project research team members (HRZZ-IP-2016-06-1210 The Building Blocks of Mental Grammar: Constraints of Information Structure), young researchers and students who believe the suggested topics could help them clarify their dilemmas about their research ideas.
Since the second part of the workshop is focused on discussing several examples of research design, we kindly ask those who would like to participate in the workshop to send us a brief description of a topic they would like to research (their research goal, methods, expectations…).