Giorno: 20 settembre 2023

New opening for a postdoctoral position in CROSSING!

New opening for a postdoctoral position in CROSSING!

We invite expressions of interest for one forthcoming postdoctoral position at the Department of Psychology, University of Milano-Bicocca, working on the project CROSSING (CROSS-linguistic interference in the assignment of meaning during sentence comprehension in bilINGual speakers: investigating semantic and syntactic processing and the case of code-switching), under the supervision of Beatrice Giustolisi. The position is offered […]

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New opening for a postdoctoral position in EPITHETS!

New opening for a postdoctoral position in EPITHETS!

We invite expressions of interest for one forthcoming postdoctoral position at the Department of Psychology at the University of Milano-Bicocca, working on the project “EPITHETS – Explaining Pejoratives In THeoretical and Experimental TermS”, under the supervision of Simone Sulpizio. Duration: 12 months Tentative starting date: February 2024 Project description: EPITHETS investigates the role of expressives, […]

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Prossimi Appuntamenti

febbraio 10, 2025
  • BIL Seminar "What does atypicality really mean? Language acquisition in autism" - Mikhail Kissine febbraio 10, 2025 @ 2:00 pm - 3:00 pm U6, Sala Lauree, Terzo piano

    Abstract
    "Research on language in autism mostly explores delayed acquisition or atypical use, the reference point being language in non-autistic individuals. Such approaches focus on language disability, but somewhat downplay the acquisition routes that may be specific to autism. More specifically, typical language development is known to be intimately linked to socio-pragmatic, joint communicative experiences. Early-onset and life-long atypicality in the socio-communicative domain are core characteristics of autism, and likely explain why language onset is often significantly delayed in autistic children. However, it is also usually assumed that language trajectories in autism should be correlated with an increase of socio-communicative skills, such as joint attention. In this talk, I will review evidence that some autistic individuals may, in fact, acquire language in spite of persisting strong socio-communicative disabilities. I will also present new results that show that some autistic children are interested in language in and of itself, independently of its communicative function, and display enhanced sensitivity to the acoustic and structural properties of the linguistic input."

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