Jane Chandlee, Adam Jardine, and Scott Nelson. Tutorial: Logic and Model Theory for Phonology. Invited presentation at the LSA 2024 Session on Formal Language Theory in Morphology and Phonology. 2024 Annual Meeting of the LSA, New York, January 6, 2023. [slides]
2023
Adam Jardine. Why Computational Learning Theory Matters for Language Learning. Invited talk at Montclair State University, Montclair, New Jersey. September 28, 2023. [slides]
Adam Jardine. No free lunch: Why computational learning theory matters for language acquisition. Invited talk at Computational Psycholinguistics Tokyo, Tokyo University, April 21, 2023. [slides]
2022
Jane Chandlee, Adam Jardine, Adam McCollum, and Tatevik Yolyan. Boolean Monadic Recursive Schemes for Phonological Analysis: A tutorial. Tutorial presented at AMP 2022, UCLA, October 21, 2022. [html verison][slides]
Eric Bakovic, Karthik Durvasula, Adam Jardine, and Kristine Yu. Panel discussion: Reflections; How to connect with the broader linguistic community. Stony Brook Workshop on Model-Theoretic Phonology, Stony Brook University, September 24, 2022.
Siddharth Bhaskar, Jane Chandlee, and Adam Jardine. Boolean monadic recursive schemes and the rational and subsequential functions. Stony Brook Workshop on Model-Theoretic Phonology, Stony Brook University, September 23, 2022. (Presented by Siddharth Bhaskar.)
2021
Tajudeen Mamadou and Adam Jardine. A Deterministic, Local Hypothesis for Tonal Processes. NELS 52, October 30, 2021. (Presented by Tajudeen Mamadou.)
Siddharth Bhaskar, Jane Chandlee, Adam Jardine, and Christopher Oakden. Boolean monadic recursive schemes as a logical characterization of the subsequential functions. Talk. LATA 2020/2021. University of Milano-Bicocca, Milan, Italy. September 24-26. (Presented by Siddharth Bhaskar.)
Wenyue Hua and Adam Jardine. Learning a Decomposition of Input Strictly Local Functions From Positive Data. ICGI 2020/21, August 24, 2021. (Presented by Wenyue Hua.)
Adam Jardine. Tone: Computation, representation, and learning. Princeton Phonology Forum 2021. March 19, 2021. (Presented online.) [slides]
2020
Wenyue Hua, Adam Jardine, and Huteng Dai. Grammatical Inference of Learning Underlying Representations and a Phonological Grammar. Talk. GLOW 43. April 8-20, 2020. (Presented electronically.)
Shiori Ikawa and Adam Jardine. The computational similarity of binding and long-distance consonant dissimilation. Talk. PLC 44. March 27-29, 2020. (Presented electronically.)
Wenyue Hua, Adam Jardine, and Huteng Dai. Subregular Induction of Underlying Representations and a Phonological Grammar. Poster Presentation. WCCFL 2020. University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada. March 6-8, 2020
Shiori Ikawa, Akane Ohtaka, and Adam Jardine. Quantifier-free tree transductions. The 2020 meeting of the Socity for Computation in Linguistics (SCiL 2020), Formal Language Theory works-in-progress session. (Presented by Shiori Ikawa.)
2019
Adam Jardine. A subregular approach to the problem of learning underlying representations. Tel Aviv University Linguistics Colloquium, December 12, 2019. [slides]
Adam Jardine. Grammatical inference and subregular phonology. Mini-course at the Tel Aviv University and Hebrew University of Jerusalem Winter School on Learning in Phonology. December 9-12, 2019.
[handout] [slides: day 1, day 2, day 3, day 4]
Wenyue Hua, Huteng Dai, and Adam Jardine. Subregular Learning of a Phonology and a Set of Underlying Forms. Talk. NECPhon 2019. Rutgers University. November 17th, 2019. (Presented by Wenyue Hua and Huteng Dai.) [slides]
Chris Oakden, Adam Jardine, and Jane Chandlee. Modeling phonological processes with recursive schemes. Talk. NECPhon 2019. Rutgers University. November 17th, 2019. [slides]
Tadjou N’Dine Mamadou and Adam Jardine. Representation and the Computation of Tone Processes. Poster. The 2019 Annual Meeting on Phonology. Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York. October 12, 2019. (Presented by Dine Mamadou.)
Nate Koser and Adam Jardine. Stress assignment and subsequentiality. Talk. The 2019 Annual Meeting on Phonology. October 11, 2019. (Presented by Nate Koser.)
Jane Chandlee and Adam Jardine. Quantifier-free Least-Fixed Point Functions for Phonology. Talk. MOL 16. July 17, 2019. Toronto, Canada. [slides]
Nathan Koser and Adam Jardine. The complexity of optimizing over strictly local constraints. Talk. The 2019 Penn Linguistics Colloquium. March 23, 2019.
Nick Danis and Adam Jardine. Q-Theory Representations and Autosegmental Representations are logically equivalent. Talk. The 2019 meeting of the Socity for Computation in Linguistics (SCiL 2019). January 8, 2019.
2018
Nate Koser, Chris Oakden, and Adam Jardine. Tone association and output locality in non-linear structures. Poster. The 2019 Annual Meeting on Phonology. October 6th, 2018. University of California San Diego, San Diego, California. [poster][handout]
Jonathan Rawski, Jeffrey Heinz, Adam Jardine, and Jane Chandlee. How the Structure of the Constraint Space Facilitates Learning. Talk. The Tenth North American Phonology Conference (NAPhCX). May 5, 2018. Condordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. (Presented by Jonathan Rawski.) [slides]
Jane Chandlee and Adam Jardine. Computational Locality and Autosegmental Processes. Talk. The 54th Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society. April 27, 2018, Chicago, Illinois. [slides]
Nick Danis, Jeffrey Heinz, and Adam Jardine. How constraints refer to nothing: The correct notion of substructure for phonology. Poster. The 2018 Annual Meeting of the Linguistic Society of America. January 6th, Salt Lake City, Utah. [poster]
2017
Nick Danis, Jeffrey Heinz, and Adam Jardine. The correct notion of substructure for phonology. Talk. The 2017 Northeast Computational Phonology Circle (NECPhon). October 21, 2017, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York. [slides]
Adam Jardine. First-order definability as a constraint on phonological structure. Poster. The 2017 Annual Meeting on Phonology. September 15, 2017, New York University, New York, New York.
Adam Jardine. On the logical complexity of autosegmental representations. Talk. The 15th Meeting on the Mathematics of Language (MOL 2017). July 13-14, 2017, Queen Mary University of London. [slides]
Nick Danis, Eileen Blum, Luca Iacoponi, Hazel Mitchley, and Adam Jardine. A computatational method for evaluating theories of phonological representation. Talk. The 53rd Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic
Society. May 26, 2017, Chicago, Illinois. [slides]
Adam Jardine and Kevin McMullin. Efficient Learning of Tier-based Strictly k-Local Languages. Talk. The 11th International Conference on Language and Automata Theory and Applications (LATA 2017). March 6, 2017, Umeå, Sweden. [slides]
Jane Chandlee, Jeffrey Heinz, Adam Jardine, and Kevin McMullin. Modeling Long-distance Alternations with Tier-based Strictly Local Functions. Talk. The 2017 Annual Meeting of the Linguistic Society of America. January 5–8, 2017, Austin, Texas. (Presented by Jane Chandlee.)
2016
Adam Jardine. Expressivity and autosegmental representations. Invited talk. Stony Brook University Frontiers colloquium. December 12, 2016. [slides]
Kevin Leahy, Prasanna Kannappan, Adam Jardine, Jeffrey Heinz, Bert Tanner, and Calin Belta. Integration of Deterministic Inference with Formal Synthesis for Control under Uncertainty. Talk. The 2016 American Control Conference. July 6-8, 2016, Boston, Massachusetts. (Presented by Kevin Leahy.)
Adam Jardine. Local faithfulness constraints over correspondence structures. Poster. The 24th Manchester Phonology Meeting. May 26th-28th, 2016, University of Manchester. [poster]
Jane Chandlee and Adam Jardine. Logical characterizations of phonological patterns. Tutorial at the MFM 24 fringe meeting tutorial session on Computation and Learnability in Phonology. May 25, 2016, University of Manchester. [slides] [handout]
Adam Jardine. Graph pattern learning for long-distance phonotactics. Talk. The 9th North American Phonology Conference. May 7, 2016, Concordia University, Montreal. [slides]
Adam Jardine. Local correspondence in phonological transformations. Talk. 2016 University of Delaware Cognitive Science Graduate Student Conference. March 4, 2016, University of Delaware. [slides]
Adam Jardine. Locality and non-linear representations in tonal phonology. Invited colloquium talk. Rutgers Linguistics colloquium. February 19, 2016, Rutgers University. [slides]
Adam Jardine. Representation and logical characterizations of phonological well-formedness. Invited seminar talk. Rutgers Linguistics colloquium. February 18, 2016, Rutgers University. [handout]
Adam Jardine and Jeffrey Heinz. Locality and learning over autosegmental representations. Talk. The 2016 Annual Meeting of the Linguistic Society of America. January 7, 2016. [slides]
2015
Jeffrey Heinz, Hyun Jin Hwangbo, and Adam Jardine. Some implications of representing gradual oppositions directly. Talk. The ninth Northeast Computational Phonology meeting (NECPHON). November 7, 2015, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware. (Presented by Jeffrey Heinz.)
Adam Jardine. Learning local constraints over autosegmental representations. Talk. The ninth Northeast Computational Phonology meeting (NECPHON). November 7, 2015. University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware. [slides]
Adam Jardine and Jeffrey Heinz. Local well-formedness constraints for non-linear phonology. Invited talk. University of Pennsylvania Common Ground Seminar. October 14, 2015. [slides]
Adam Jardine and Jeffrey Heinz. Well-formed tone mappings with local, inviolable surface constraints. Poster. The 2015 Annual Meeting on Phonology. October 10, 2015. Vancouver, British Columbia. [poster]
Adam Jardine and Jeffrey Heinz. A concatenation operation to derive autosegmental graphs. Talk. The 14th Meeting on Mathematics of Language. July 26, 2015. University of Chicago. [slides]
Jeffrey Heinz and Adam Jardine. Remarks on Autosegmental Representations. Berkeley Phonology Phorum. May 2015, University of California, Berkeley. (Presented by Jeffrey Heinz.)
Adam Jardine and Jeffrey Heinz. Markedness constraints are negative: an autosegmental constraint definition language. Talk. The 51st annual meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society. April 25, 2015, University of Chicago. [slides]
Adam Jardine. Representing and learning non-linear sound patterns in natural language. Poster. 2015 University of Delaware Graduate Research Forum. April 21, 2015, University of Delaware. [poster]
Jane Chandlee, Jeffrey Heinz, and Adam Jardine. Representing and Learning Opaque Maps with Strictly Local Functions. Talk. The 38th Generative Linguistics in the Old World colloquium (GLOW), special workshop on the implications of computation and learnability for phonological theory. April 15-18, 2015, Paris, France. (Presented by Jeffrey Heinz.)
Adam Jardine and Jeffrey Heinz. Negative and positive markedness constraints. Talk. 2015 University of Delaware Congitive Science Graduate Student Conference. March 13, 2015, University of Delaware.
Adam Jardine. Learning tiers for long-distance phonotactics. Talk. The 6th biannual Generative Approaches to Language Acquisition - North America conference (GALANA). February 19-21, 2015, University of Maryland at College Park. [slides]
Jane Chandlee, Jeffrey Heinz, and Adam Jardine. Learning Opaque Mappings. Poster presentation. The 6th biannual Generative Approaches to Language Acquisition - North America conference (GALANA). February 19-21, 2015, University of Maryland at College Park. [poster]
2014
Adam Jardine. Representing and learning phonological tiers. Talk. The eighth Northeast Computational Phonology meeting (NECPHON), Nov. 15th, 2014, NYU, New York, New York. [slides]
Jane Chandlee, Adam Jardine, and Jeffrey Heinz. Learning repairs for marked structures. Poster presentation at the 2014 Annual Meeting on Phonology, September 20th, 2014, MIT, Boston, Massachusetts. [poster]
Adam Jardine, Jane Chandlee, Rémi Eryaud, and Jeffrey Heinz. Very efficient learning of structured classes of subsequential functions from positive data. Talk. The 12th International Colloquium on Grammatical Inference, September 17–19th, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan. (Presented by Jeffrey Heinz.)
Jie Fu, Jeffrey Heinz, Adam Jardine, and Herbert G. Tanner. Perception-based grammatical inference for adaptive systems. Work in progress session, 12th International Colloquium on Grammatical Inference, September 17–19th, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan. (Presented by Jeffrey Heinz.)
2013
Adam Jardine and Amanda Payne. Expanding StressTyp2: Integrating pitch accent and tone. Poster presentation. The Third International Conference on Phonetics and Phonology (3rd ICPP), December 20-22nd, 2013, National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics, Tachikawa, Japan. [poster]
Jane Chandlee and Adam Jardine. Learning Phonological Mappings by Learning Strictly Local Functions. Talk. Phonology 2013, November 10th, 2013, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. (Presented by Jane Chandlee.)
Adam Jardine. Logic and the Generative Power of Autosegmental Phonology. Poster Presentation. Phonology 2013, November 10th, 2013, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. [poster] [handout]
Adam Jardine. Computationally, tone is different. Talk. The seventh Northeast Computational Phonology meeting (NECPHON), Oct. 26th, 2013, MIT, Boston, Massachusetts. [slides]
Adam Jardine. Refining the Structure of Genitive Subject Relative Clauses in Japanese. Talk. 2013 University of Delaware Cognitive Science Graduate Student Conference, Feb. 22nd, Newark, Delaware.
Adam Jardine, Angeliki Athanasopoulou and Peter Cole. Prestopped Nasals in Banyaduq: Issues in Representation. Talk. 2013 Annual Meeting of the Linguistic Society of America, Jan. 5-8th, Boston, Massachusetts. [slides]
2012
Adam Jardine and Amanda Payne. StressTyps and Stress Patterns: Merging Linguistic Databases. Poster presentation. University Delaware Conference on Stress and Accent, Nov. 29–Dec. 1st, 2012, Newark, Delaware.
Adam Jardine and Feng Ye. The Mystery of Nasal Preplosion in Banyaduq: Issues in Representing Complex Segments. Poster presentation. 2012 University of Delaware Cognitive Science Graduate Student Conference, Feb. 17th, Newark, Delaware.