Explaining Individual Lifespan Change
The EILisCh project aims to model and explain linguistic variation in Icelandic syntax by analyzing MPs' speeches and interviews, leveraging sociolinguistics and technology for significant insights.
Projectdetails
Introduction
The EILisCh project will focus on linguistic variation and change in Icelandic syntax. It will be the most ambitious attempt so far to model, understand, and explain Individual Lifespan Change in linguistic behavior, drawing on recent advances in sociolinguistics, quantitative syntactic theory, clinical linguistics, as well as resources recently made available by Language Technology.
Project Goals
The project will harness these ingredients and the experience of the PI, along with the infrastructure present in his Language and Technology lab, in order to facilitate a new kind of large-scale project that will yield substantial progress towards important empirical, theoretical, and methodological goals, as well as benefits for society.
Research Methodology
- I will track hundreds of Members of Parliament via their speeches over their entire political career.
- I will interview dozens of current and former MPs to establish an even deeper profile of how they use language.
Importance of Location
Carrying this research out in Iceland is important because of the unusually easy access that researchers have to public figures in this small language community. The kind of precise modeling described in this proposal is only possible in a project that builds on substantial pre-existing Language Resources and takes place in a setting where extensive knowledge of the linguistic data and the required technological tools is present.
Resources and Experience
My Language and Technology lab at the University of Iceland is the right place to do this, and the experience I have gathered in several previous projects will be essential for my team’s success.
Funding Needs
However, the scale of this enterprise is beyond the means of national funding agencies in Iceland; thus, I turn to the ERC, so that together we can redefine the state of the art in the study of Individual Lifespan Change.
Financiële details & Tijdlijn
Financiële details
Subsidiebedrag | € 1.499.000 |
Totale projectbegroting | € 1.499.000 |
Tijdlijn
Startdatum | 1-11-2023 |
Einddatum | 31-10-2028 |
Subsidiejaar | 2023 |
Partners & Locaties
Projectpartners
- HASKOLI ISLANDSpenvoerder
Land(en)
Vergelijkbare projecten binnen European Research Council
Project | Regeling | Bedrag | Jaar | Actie |
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MANUNKIND: Determinants and Dynamics of Collaborative ExploitationThis project aims to develop a game theoretic framework to analyze the psychological and strategic dynamics of collaborative exploitation, informing policies to combat modern slavery. | ERC STG | € 1.497.749 | 2022 | Details |
Elucidating the phenotypic convergence of proliferation reduction under growth-induced pressureThe UnderPressure project aims to investigate how mechanical constraints from 3D crowding affect cell proliferation and signaling in various organisms, with potential applications in reducing cancer chemoresistance. | ERC STG | € 1.498.280 | 2022 | Details |
Uncovering the mechanisms of action of an antiviral bacteriumThis project aims to uncover the mechanisms behind Wolbachia's antiviral protection in insects and develop tools for studying symbiont gene function. | ERC STG | € 1.500.000 | 2023 | Details |
The Ethics of Loneliness and SociabilityThis project aims to develop a normative theory of loneliness by analyzing ethical responsibilities of individuals and societies to prevent and alleviate loneliness, establishing a new philosophical sub-field. | ERC STG | € 1.025.860 | 2023 | Details |
MANUNKIND: Determinants and Dynamics of Collaborative Exploitation
This project aims to develop a game theoretic framework to analyze the psychological and strategic dynamics of collaborative exploitation, informing policies to combat modern slavery.
Elucidating the phenotypic convergence of proliferation reduction under growth-induced pressure
The UnderPressure project aims to investigate how mechanical constraints from 3D crowding affect cell proliferation and signaling in various organisms, with potential applications in reducing cancer chemoresistance.
Uncovering the mechanisms of action of an antiviral bacterium
This project aims to uncover the mechanisms behind Wolbachia's antiviral protection in insects and develop tools for studying symbiont gene function.
The Ethics of Loneliness and Sociability
This project aims to develop a normative theory of loneliness by analyzing ethical responsibilities of individuals and societies to prevent and alleviate loneliness, establishing a new philosophical sub-field.
Vergelijkbare projecten uit andere regelingen
Project | Regeling | Bedrag | Jaar | Actie |
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Experimental replication of historical reanalysis processesEXREAN aims to develop a laboratory methodology to replicate historical reanalysis processes, exploring social and individual factors influencing language change. | ERC COG | € 1.980.706 | 2024 | Details |
Language geography and the dynamics of linguistic and population prehistoryThe LANGUAGE REDUX project aims to uncover the factors preserving ancient linguistic distributions by combining historical evidence with spatial statistics and quantitative modeling. | ERC COG | € 1.974.676 | 2024 | Details |
Linguistic traces: low-frequency forms as evidence of language and population historyThis project aims to reconstruct early European languages by analyzing low-frequency linguistic variants in historical texts, integrating philology with deep learning to uncover cultural interactions. | ERC ADG | € 2.498.135 | 2025 | Details |
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Experimental replication of historical reanalysis processes
EXREAN aims to develop a laboratory methodology to replicate historical reanalysis processes, exploring social and individual factors influencing language change.
Language geography and the dynamics of linguistic and population prehistory
The LANGUAGE REDUX project aims to uncover the factors preserving ancient linguistic distributions by combining historical evidence with spatial statistics and quantitative modeling.
Linguistic traces: low-frequency forms as evidence of language and population history
This project aims to reconstruct early European languages by analyzing low-frequency linguistic variants in historical texts, integrating philology with deep learning to uncover cultural interactions.
Why do infants learn language so fast? A reverse engineering approach
This project develops a computational model to explore how infants efficiently learn language through statistical learning and three additional mechanisms, aiming to produce comparable outcomes to children's language acquisition.