The University of Massachusetts Amherst
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Experimental Resources

Web-based experiments

On the “P-Side” at least, people have recently been running web-based experiments, and getting excellent results. I’m starting this thread as a way of sharing resources, and also perhaps talking about issues that come up in this domain.

The two projects I’ve seen come to fruition are Wendell Kimper‘s experiment on variation in Finnish vowel harmony, and Claire Moore-Cantwell‘s wug-test experiment on Hebrew denominals. Wendell used LimeSurvey, which we have installed on the departmental server (ask me if you’d like to use it). LimeSurvey didn’t work for Claire (it couldn’t pass a variable from one part of the experiment to another), so she developed her own java-based software that fit her needs. Interim summary: we have LimeSurvey, and it is a simple solution for relatively straightforward experiments – if you have more detailed notes from first-hand experience, please add them below.

We have the good fortune of having Michael Becker in our midst this year, and he has recently been working on web-presentation software he and Jonathan Levine call Experigen. He has run several experiments using this software, and demo’d it for a group of us this summer, several of whom immediately decided to set up their own experiments with this elegant set of tools. It requires a little more expertise in html, etc. than LimeSurvey, but we should have or get that anyway, right? Again, those with more experience, please comment below.

Categories
Events Resources

ICESL, UMass Cognitive Science sites

The website for our Institute for Computational and Experimental Study of Language can be found here. You’ll find notices of upcoming events (coming soon: Roger Levy, Sept. 16th, Dominic Massaro, Oct. 14th), information about the seed grant program (next deadline this fall), and about labs and working groups across campus.

Information about the broader world of Cognitive Science at UMass can be found here. You’ll find a CogSci events calendar, and the details about the Cognitive Science Certificate.

I’m maintaining both of those sites at the moment, so let me know if you have any updates or other requests for changes.

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Other

New experimental linguistics blog!

Hi all! Welcome to the new experimental Linguistics at UMass blog. We’ll keep you updated on the work, thinking, and events that are coming out of South College / Bartlett halls in a timely fashion. Stay tuned for news!