Computational Linguistics poster session

The 48th Annual Meeting of the German Linguistic Society (DGfS), hosted by Trier University, brings together linguists from all subfields in Germany and beyond. The Computational Linguistics poster session offers an opportunity to share computational approaches to language within the broader community.

The poster session is organized by the Special Interest Group on Computational Linguistics of the DGfS (dgfs.de/cl).

 

(As of February 4, 2026 - subject to change!)

Poster Session 1:

Wednesday, February 25, 2026 | 15:45-16:30

1Connor Lee Bradley (Universitet i Oslo): Descendants of Germania and beyond: A dialectometric geography of the medieval north
2Nicholas Catasso (Bergische Universität Wuppertal): Almost native (?): Exploring the limits of AI in modeling human linguistic judgment
3Mara Fedorova1, Phillip Tögel2, Vandana Jha2, Frederik Elwert1, Henning Hebhard1, Danah Tonne2 & Volkhard Krech1 (1Ruhr-Universität Bochum, 2Karlsruher Institut für Technologie): Stylometry in literary Chinese: A systematic comparison of Burrows’ delta parameter
4Petra Giommarelli1,2 (1University of Pisa, 2University of Naples L’Orientale): Evaluating Italian multiword expression recognition in LLMs: A comparative analysis of LLaMA, Mistral, and Gemma
5Isabell Landwehr1 & Carmen Schacht2 (1Universität des Saarlandes, 2Ruhr-Universität Bochum): Building CoBra – a compound branching resource

Poster Session 2:

Thursday, February 26, 2026 | 10:30-11:15

6Lucrezia Sabia (Third University of Rome & La Sapienza): Adjectives that say no to negation: can LLMs recognize them? A pilot evaluation study for Italian
7Motoki Saito1, Annette Gerstenberg2, Hanno Müller3 (1University of Oldenburg, 2University of Potsdam, 3Hasso-Plattner Institute): Evaluating AI supported ASR performance: the role of semantic density within the Discriminative Lexicon Model (DLM)
8Felicia Stich & Nivedita Mani (Georg-August-Universität Göttingen): Form-meaning systematicity in the early lexicon: A cross-linguistic corpus study
9Joshua Wieler1,3, Marco Sund1, Jiabin Yao2, Simon Petitjean1, Kristian Berg1, Henriette Huber2 & Stefan Hartmann2 (1University of Oldenburg, 2HHU Düsseldorf, 3Ruhr-University Bochum): Annotation and analysis of handwritten <s> variation using HAnnoI
10Aslihan Yesilyurt (Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg): Prompting patterns: Anxiety markers in LLM output
11Mark-Matthias Zymla, Kascha Kruschwitz, Paul Zodl (Universität Konstanz): Lexical functional grammar for semantic parsing and pragmatic analysis