Posts by Collection

publications

talks

Harmony and dendrophilia in syntax

Published:

2017/12: Yingqi Jing, Damian Blasi & Balthasar Bickel. Harmony and dendrophilia in syntax. Talk at the 12th Conference of the Association for Linguistics Typology (ALT), Australian National University, Canberra, Australia.

Harmony and dendrophilia in syntax

Published:

2018/4: Yingqi Jing, Damian Blasi & Balthasar Bickel. Harmony and dendrophilia in syntax. Talk at the 12th International Conference on Language Evolution (EvoLang), Nicolas Copernicus University, Toruń, Poland.

Harmony, locality and dependency direction in syntax

Published:

2018/11: Jing Yingqi. Harmony, locality and dependency direction in syntax. Talk at the Workshop of Perspectives on Word Order Evolution: Reconstruction, Typology, and Processing, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.

Uralic Typological Database

Published:

2021/6: Miina Norvik and Yingqi Jing. Uralic Typological Database. Talk at the Workshop of Uralic Historical Atlas, University of Turku, Finland.

Uralic typology in the light of a new comprehensive dataset

Published:

2022/08: Norvik, Miina, Yingqi Jing, Michael Dunn, Helle Metslang, Karl Pajusalu and Outi Vesakoski. Uralic typology in the light of a new comprehensive dataset. Talk at the 13th International Congress for Finno-Ugric Studies, University of Vienna, Austria.

Phylogenetic evidence against dependency locality in Indo-European

Published:

2022/12: Yingqi Jing, Joakim Nivre, and Michael Dunn. Phylogenetic evidence against dependency locality in Indo-European. Talk at the 14th Conference of the Association for Linguistic Typology (ALT), University of Texas at Austin, Texas, USA.

Phylogenetic multilevel models reveal a simplicity bias in Uralic

Published:

2022/09: Yingqi Jing, Norvik, Miina, Outi Vesakoski and Michael Dunn. Phylogenetic multilevel models reveal a simplicity bias in Uralic. Talk at the 14th Conference of the Association for Linguistic Typology (ALT), University of Texas at Austin, Texas, USA.

teaching