DiLCo Lecture Series 2022
DiLCo, a research network on 'Digital language variation in context', presented a series of online lectures on digital language and communication research.
Please scroll down for information about the speakers and lectures.
All lectures have been recorded and are available open access on our DiLCo Video Repository.
Overview
Date | Lecturer | Title |
08.04. | Ruth Page (University of Birmingham) |
Shared Stories and Social Media Influencers on TikTok |
12.05. |
Sender Dovchin (Curtin University) |
The ordinariness of digital linguistic diversity in the Global South |
16.06. | Katharina König (Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster) | Transmodal messenger interactions - The sequential ordering of text and audio postings in WhatsApp chats |
07.07. | Caroline Tagg (Open University UK) |
Mobile conversations in context: a post-digital perspective on identity and interaction |
22.09. | Christian Ilbury (Edinburg University) |
Between the macro and the micro: Using computational tools to better understand sociolinguistic issues |
20.10. | Dirk Hovy (Università Bocconi) |
Tell me who commutes and I tell you how you speak - tracing the impact of commuting patterns on regional language |
27.10. |
Axel Bohmann (Universität Freiburg) |
Linguistic dynamics in digital diaspora communities: The case of Nairaland |
17.11. | Reinhild Vandekerckhove (Universiteit Antwerpen) | Social patterns in adolescent social media writing: On the interaction of age, gender and education |
24.11. (11am) |
Carmen Lee (The Chinese University of Hong Kong) | Digital discourse analysis in public policy research: The case of doxxing discourse in Hong Kong |
08.12. | Jack Grieve (University of Birmingham) |
In Search of Double Modals |