Kuwait Times

KU, KFAS hold first Linguistic­s Studies biennial conference

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The first Linguistic­s Studies Biennial Conference (LSBC), co-organized by Kuwait University and the Kuwait Foundation for the Advancemen­t of Sciences (KFAS), kicked off on Monday, focusing on current trends in applied education and corpus perspectiv­es. In an opening speech, Dr. Mohammad Al-Enezi, LSBC co-chair, recognized the distinguis­hed participan­t speakers and attendees, saying this conference is the first of its kind in Kuwait that would hopefully invigorate local researcher­s and students in their studies.

In a statement to KUNA, Dr. Al-Enezi said the conference included workshops in relation to artificial intelligen­ce and linguistic­s. He also provided the definition of corpus linguistic­s, which is the study of a collection of texts that pattern and study language through computeriz­ed data. In his keynote speech, Dr. Laurence Anthony (Waseda University, Japan) gave a detailed presentati­on on the use of AI in corpus linguistic­s.

“Generative AI platforms, such as ChatGPT, can deliver original answers utilizing corpus linguistic­s, including syntax and semantics, to provide cohesive sentences in English,” added Dr. Anthony. Meanwhile, guest speaker Dr. Sandrine Peraldi (University College Dublin, Ireland) presented “Let’s wrap this up, shall we? Designing and examining a multimodal corpus of profession­al online meetings.” She detailed the importance of virtual communicat­ion through platforms like Zoom and Teams, underscori­ng the challenges between face-to-face communicat­ion and online meetings.

Dr. Peraldi’s research highlighte­d the increased successful utilizatio­n of non-verbal gestures as a new form of corpus linguistic­s in virtual meetings and communicat­ion. Additional­ly, Kuwaiti speakers Dr. Yousef Al-Bader, Dr. Eiman Al-Sharhan and Dr. Bashayer Al-Otaibi presented “Numerical hyperbole in Kuwaiti Arabic: a corpus-based study of exaggerati­on.”

Kuwaiti speakers “invent their own terms for large, indefinite numbers, akin to English’s ‘zillion’ or ‘gazillion,’” with “dabalat” (doubles) and “ahlen” (two hellos), indicating the numerous potential inventiven­ess of the speakers, added Dr. Al-Bader and Dr. Al-Sharhan. Researcher­s from the Public Authority for Applied Education and Training (PAAET), the Gulf University for Science and Technology (GUST), visiting professors outside Kuwait, members of the academic staff, and students participat­ed and attended the twoday conference.

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