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Biennial Conference of theInternational Associationof FORENSIC
LINGUISTS
PROG
RAMM
E
2
IAFL|PORTO 2017 Monday, 10 July
10.00 Desk opening & registration
10.30
11.30
PLENARY 1 – A2 (Faculty of Arts, Auditorium 2)
Martin Potthast
Bauhaus-Universität Weimar
On the Vulnerability of Automatic Author Identification Approaches
Chair: Jorge Teixeira
11.30
13.00
A2 (Faculty of Arts, Auditorium 2)
Forensic Linguistics Dojo
13.00
14.00
Lunch
14.00
17.30
A2 (Faculty of Arts, Auditorium 2)
Forensic Linguistics Dojo
17.30
18.00
Coffee Break
18.00
18.30
Welcome and Opening Ceremony - Auditorium Nobre (Faculty of Arts, Auditorium)
Presidential Address
Tim Grant
President of the IAFL – Aston University, UK
18.30
19.30
PLENARY 2 - Auditorium Nobre (Faculty of Arts, Auditorium)
Malcolm Coulthard
Aston University / Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina
IAFL – The Next 25 Years
Chair: Lawrence Solan 19.30
20.15
Welcome Reception
3
IAFL|PORTO 2017 Tuesday, 11 July
09.15
10.15
PLENARY 3 - Auditorium FAUP (Faculty of Architecture)
Tim Grant
Aston University
The usefulness of investigative linguistic analysis in the Courts and beyond
Chair: Jack Grieve
10.15
10.45
COFFEE BREAK
10.45
12.15
PARALLEL SESSION 1
Room SR 1
Investigating Plagiarism
Chair: Sheila Queralt
PARALLEL SESSION 2
Room 203
Interpreter-mediated Courtroom Interaction
Chair: Maria del Carmen Rios Garcia
PARALLEL SESSION 3
Room 201
Forensic Phonetics
Chair: Maria Lúcia Castro Gomes
PARALLEL SESSION 4
Room SR2
Linguagem e Direito
Chair: Virgínia Colares
Milaydis Sosa-Napolskij, Belinda Maia & Rui
Sousa-Silva
The present participle clause: A distinctive linguistic
feature of research papers authored by non-native
speakers
María Valentina Noblia
The concept of author and work in Argentine legislation
and its consequences for the practice of forensic
linguistics in plagiarism
Helena Pires & Rui Sousa-Silva
Investigating the usefulness of linguistic analyses to
approach plagiarism in the visual arts
Christian Licoppe, Maud Verdier & Clair-Antoine
Veyrier
Interpreters and the politics of turn-taking. Managing
long turns in consecutively interpreted courtroom
interrogation sequences
Eva Ng
Linguistic Disadvantage before the Law: Chinese
Witnesses Testifying in English in the Hong Kong
Courtroom
Lei Yu
An Ethnographic Approach to Summary Interpreting in
Criminal Trials in Chinese Mainland
Fernanda López-Escobedo, Teresita Adriana
Reyes Careaga & Axel Hernández
A proposal to classify a forensic speech database in
Spanish according to linguistic characteristics
Jael Sânera Sigales Gonçalves & Sonia Cenceschi
Similarities and differences on the legal application of
forensic phonetics in Italy and in Brazil
José María Lahoz-Bengoechea, Juana Gil
Fernández & José Villa Villa
Fillers in disguised accented speech
Alina Villalva & Alexandrina Pinto de Almeida
O Direito e a Linguística
Rosalice Pinto, Marisa Dinis & Gorete Marques
Linguagem Jurídica: das boas práticas à real
simplificação
Toribio Enrique Sosa & Mariana Cucatto
Petição Inicial, Pretensão e Pedido: Uma Olhada desde
a Linguística e o Direito Processual
4
12.15
13.15
PARALLEL SESSION 5
Room SR 1
Vulnerable Witnesses
Chair: Nicci MacLeod
PARALLEL SESSION 6
Room 203
Legal Interpreting
Chair: Elena Galvão
PARALLEL SESSION 7
Room 201
Bilingualism and the Law
Chair: Belinda Maia
PARALLEL SESSION 8
Room SR 2
Language and the Legal Process
Chair: Bill Eggington
David Wright, Lucy Betts, Rachel Harding,
Catarina Sjolin Knight, Sheine Peart & Kendall
Newbold
Investigating children’s accounts of street harassment
Guusje Jol & Wyke Stommel
Police interviews with child-victims: Reports of
resistance and their interactional follow-up
Vicky Wong
The Role of Preparation using Case-related Materials in
Court Interpreting
Ikuko Nakane & Makiko Mizuno
Court decisions on legal interpreting in Japan
Maria Angeles Orts
A bilingual, bicultural approach to detachment and
appraisal in the law: tracing impersonality and
interaction in English and Spanish legal op-eds
Richard Powell
Ideology and pragmatism in bilingual law
Celia Blake
Language and Credibility in the Judicial Process: A
Jamaican Case Study
Phyllis Mwangi & Mwangi Gachara
An Analysis of Metaphors of Incitement and their
(In)admissibility in Judicial Proceedings
13.15
14.15
LUNCH
14.15
15.45
PARALLEL SESSION 9
Room SR 1
Multimodal approaches
Chair: Silvana Mota-Ribeiro
PARALLEL SESSION 10
Room 203
Access to Justice and Legal Narratives
Chair: Richard Yuan
PARALLEL SESSION 11
Room 201
Forensic Phonetics
Chair: Fernanda López-Escobedo
PARALLEL SESSION 12
Room SR 2
Multilingualism and the Law
Chair: Sandra Silva
Carmen Rosa Caldas-Coulthard
Condemned without trial: semiotic representations of
women criminals
Jinshi Chen
Multimodal Information Analysis of Judge’s Footings
and Role Shifts in Criminal Courtroom Interaction
Esther Kimani & Fredrick Ntale
“An Honorable Suspect”: (In)congruity as
Legitimization in the International Criminal Court (ICC)
Susan Berk-Seligson & Mitchell Seligson
Extralegal Justice: Guatemalan Lynching Narratives
Vânia Fernandes & Aníbal Ferreira
Voice formants modification due to GSM and VOIP
telephonic communication
James Tompkinson
Taking a different stance: Listener inference of a
‘threatening tone of voice' from phonetic properties of
speech
Giulia Terlizzi
Public policy and ordre public: conflicts of culture. The
case of Québec and the Eu policy
Karolina Paluszek
“Babel as a gift” – benefits of multilingual
interpretation of EU law
5
Gunilla Byrman
“How drunk were you?” Narrations and Multimodality
in Crime Trials
Tatiana Tkacukova
Pathways to improving access to justice: The interplay
between corpus linguistics and socio-legal research
Ricky Kw Chan
Speaker discrimination: citation tones vs. coarticulated
tones
Lee-Anne Sackett
Multilingualism and the law in Vanuatu
15.45
16.05
COFFEE BREAK
16.05
17.05
PLENARY 4 – A1 (Faculty of Arts, Auditorium 1)
Janet Ainsworth
Seattle University
What is a Promise?: Linguistic Analysis versus Legal Interpretation
Chair: Malcolm Coulthard
17:05 SOCIAL PROGRAMME:
TOUR TO THE STADIUM ‘ESTÁDIO DO DRAGÃO’
HOME TO THE FOOTBALL CLUB F.C. PORTO
OR
TOUR TO CASA DA MÚSICA
ARCHITECTURAL ICON DESIGNED BY REM KOOLHAAS
6
IAFL|PORTO 2017 Wednesday, 12 July
09.30
10.30
PLENARY 5 - Auditorium FAUP (Faculty of Architecture)
Alan Durant
Middlesex University
Forensic linguistics: directions within the ‘profession of words’
Chair: Krzysztof Kredens
10.30
11.00
COFFEE BREAK
11.00
13.00
COLLOQUIUM 1
Room A2
Identities Online
Discussant: Tim Grant
COLLOQUIUM 2
Room SR 1
Linguagem e Género
Discussant: Carmen Rosa Caldas-
Coulthard
PARALLEL SESSION 13
Room 203
Interpreting and Sign Language
Interpreting in Legal Contexts
Chair: Isabel Galhano
PARALLEL SESSION 14
Room 201
The Linguist as Expert
Chair: Edward Finegan
PARALLEL SESSION 15
Room SR 2
Power and the Law
Chair: Anabela Leão
Tim Grant, Nicci MacLeod, Annie
Houle & Emily Carmody
Investigating the language of online child
abuse
Lucia Freitas, Debora Figueiredo,
Vigínia Leal & Catarina Oliveira
Linguagem, gênero, direito e feminismos
Jemina Napier, Sandra Hale, David
Spencer & Mehera San Roque
“I had doubts about how it would work and
then I was surprised at how well it did
work...”: Exploring perceptions of the
participation of deaf people and sign
language interpreters
Monwabisi Ralarala, Russell Kaschula
& Zakeera Docrat
The exclusion of South African sign
language speakers in the criminal justice
system: a case based approach
Sabine Ehrhardt
Automatic approaches to forensic text
comparison: A discussion about their
linkage to linguistic theory and adequate
evaluation of evidence
Tharwat El-Sakran
Lawyers’ Perceptions of and Attitudes
Towards the Employment of Forensic
Linguists’ Testimony in Courts
Natalie Stroud
The Indigenous Koori Court: Challenging
Linguistic Conventions
Nicole Payan
“The Least I Can Do Is Speak Out”
Projecting Voice Through Aboriginal Oral
Traditions
7
Xin Liu
What makes it challenging to interpret
cross-examination questions? A
pragmalinguistic perspective
Jieun Lee
Due Process and Legal Interpreting:
Interpreting Suspects’ Rights to Remain
Silent and to Counsel during Investigative
Interviews
Olu Popoola
Wordplay or nonsense, empirically
speaking? Evaluating meaning potential in
trademark dilution cases using Syntactic
Register Analysis
Isobelle Clarke & Krzysztof Kredens
The linguist as expert in the legal setting:
towards an ontology of practice
Tammy Gales
Stances of Contrition: An Appraisal Analysis
of Apologies in American Indian Parole
Board Hearings
William Eggington & Tanner Call
Black Pragmatics Matter:
Miscommunication between U.S. Police
and Inner-City African Americans
13.00
14.00
LUNCH
14.00
15.30
PARALLEL SESSION 16
Room A2
Investigative Interviewing
Chair: Jennifer Glougie
PARALLEL SESSION 17
Room SR 1
Legal and Plain Language
Chair: Andrea Nini
PARALLEL SESSION 18
Room 203
Linguistic Disadvantage before the
Law
Chair: Lígia Afonso
PARALLEL SESSION 19
Room 201
Authorship Analysis
Chair: Margaret van Naersen
PARALLEL SESSION 20
Room SR 2
Courtroom Interaction
Chair: Clara Barros
8
Nicci MacLeod
Some ideological functions of turn-initial
discourse markers in police interviews with
women reporting rape
Sabrina Jorge
A Critical Discourse Analysis of Police
Interviews in Cases of Violence against
Women in Brazil
Georgina Heydon
Written-response interview protocols: an
innovative approach to confidential
reporting and victim interviewing in sexual
assault investigations
Mami Okawara
Simplification of Basic Legal Terms of
Japanese Civil Code
Işıl Özyıldırım
Turkish Legislative Language : An Analysis
of Register Variation
Rachelle Lintao & Marilu Madrunio
Transforming the Complex Syntactic
Structures of a Philippine Consumer-
Finance Contract
Anna Carolina Corrêa & Bruno
Deusdará
Does “social group” help us elaborate
refugee-related policies?
Frances Rock
‘You can speak to her just like you speak to
me’: New challenges in revisiting
disadvantage before the law through
asylum support
Michael O'Laughlin
How Not to Give a Miranda Warning in a
Murder Case
Veronika Volná
Forensic Analysis of Anonymization
Strategies in English
Shaomin Zhang
Authorship attribution and feature testing
for short Chinese emails
Joana Aguiar & Pilar Barbosa
Authorship attribution in a case of
defamation
Magdalena Szczyrbak
Subjectivity and the progressive in
courtroom interaction
Gatitu Kiguru & Purity Nthiga
Use of Pragmatic Strategies in the Cross-
Examination Phase of Sampled Trials in
Kenyan Courts
Emmanuel Satia & Kembo Sure
Resisting Accusations of Wrong Doing by
Peripheral Parties in the Confirmation of
Charges Hearings in the Kenyan Cases at
the International Criminal Court
15.30
16.00
COFFEE BREAK
16.00
18.00
PARALLEL SESSION 21
Room SR 1
Authorship Profiling
Chair: David Wright
PARALLEL SESSION 22
Room 203
Meaning and Interpretation
Chair: Tatiana Tkacukova
PARALLEL SESSION 23
Room 201
Courtroom, Police and Prison Discourse
Chair: Georgina Heydon
PARALLEL SESSION 24
Room SR 2
Legal Language
Chair: Frances Rock
Andrea Nini
Profiling the anonymous authors of malicious forensic
texts
Terrence R Carney
‘Please be discerning about your movements on
campus’: vague language and accountability in crisis
risk communication
Piotr Węgorowski
Police: an institution, a service provider or both?
Exploring heteroglossic communication in a
community policing setting
Joao Pedro Padua
Inserting Morality into Law through Discourse: The
Case of the Brazilian Supreme Court Decision to
Remove the President of the Lower Chamber of
Congress
9
Cristina Greco
The Falange Armata Letters: Authorship Profiling of
Linguistic Markers of Style and Ideology in Italian
Terrorist Communication
Garazi Jimenez Aragon & Sheila Queralt Estevez
Forensic linguistic analysis for the identification of
political parties in the Basque Country
Isobelle Clarke
Dimensions of Twitter trolling
Joana Forbes, Rui Sousa-Silva & Belinda Maia
Those who Lawfully Wed – A Civil Dimension of
Forensic Linguistic Analysis
Purity Nthiga & Gatitu Kiguru
The (In)comprehensibility of Language Used in
Sampled Insurance Policies in Kenya
Mel Greenlee
Capital Confusion: Linguistic and Legal Implications of
Cerebral Immaturity
Rosalice Pinto
Legal text genres as socio discursive practices: a textual
analysis
Wang Shuai & Yuan Chuanyou
Eliciting Confessions from Drug Users: An
Ethnographic and Linguistic Approach
Chris Heffer
Resisting Reckless Rhetoric: The ‘TRUST’ Untruthfulness
Framework and the Legal Process
Zakeera Docrat & Russell Kaschula
Transforming the South African legal system through
the use of African languages
Mwangi Gachara & Phyllis Mwangi
The Forked Road to Justice: Analysis of Metaphors in
ICC Discourse
16.00
18.00
Hall
Poster Session
Annina Heini: A comparative study of police interview discourse in investigative interviews with 17 and 18 year old suspects in England and Wales
Chunfang Huang: A Comparative Analysis of English Complaints and Chinese Complaints: A Stylistic Perspective
David Griffin: "Truth language": The legal discourse of the sovereign citizen movement
Elena Garayzábal & Mercedes Reigosa: Credibility of a simulated script of an anonymous phone call: A terrorism case report
Guusje Jol & Wyke Stommel: Interviewing children: How Dutch police officers are trained
Ivan Sammut: Multilinguism in Legal Drafting & Translation - The EU experience
Joana Teixeira: O papel de alguns aspetos linguísticos na modernização do discurso jurídico
10
Karoline Marko: ’I tried to make it mean and demanding.’ Underlying motivations for and against the use of disguise in written threats
Katarina Duarte: As vozes da Direita e da Esquerda: Uma Análise Linguística do Discurso Jornalístico
Lucie Gianola & Julien Longhi: Natural Language Processing for textual analysis of judicial proceedings
Sarah Kelly: Acoustic correlates of authentic and simulated directly-worded threats
Tatiana Litvinova, Olga Litvinova & Pavel Seredin: Composition and Structure of the Russian Deception Bank Corpus Designed for Developing Methods of Text-Based Deception Detection
Tatiana Litvinova, Olga Litvinova, Pavel Seredin & Ekaterina Ryzhkova: Linguistic Features of Internet Texts by People Who Committed Suicides
Timothy Habick: Assured Attributions of Authorship
Timothy Habick & Tek Hong Chai: Psychology, Veracity, and Forensic Linguistics
Zoraida García-Castillo, Fernanda López-Escobedo & Jennifer Hincapie: Proposal for a glossary of terms frequently used in Forensic Science
18.00
19.00
BUSINESS MEETING
20.00
CONFERENCE DINNER
CASA DO VINHO VERDE
11
IAFL|PORTO 2017 Thursday, 13 July
10.00
11.00
PLENARY 6 - Auditorium FAUP (Faculty of Architecture)
Shonna Trinch
City University of New York
Law, Language, and the Creation Place: The Deployment of Eminent Domain in the Contested City of Brooklyn, NY
Chair: Carmen Rosa Caldas-Coulthard
11.00
11.30
COFFEE BREAK
11.30
13.00
PARALLEL SESSION 25
Room SR 1
Authorship Attribution
Chair: Tim Grant
PARALLEL SESSION 26
Room 203
Hate Speech and Offensive Language
Chair: Fátima Oliveira
PARALLEL SESSION 27
Room 201
Courtroom Discourse
Chair: Alexandra Guedes Pinto
PARALLEL SESSION 28
Room SR 2
Investigative Interviewing
Chair: Chris Heffer
Jack Grieve
Short-text authorship attribution using n-gram tracing
Liliana Romão
A quantitative and qualitative analysis of an
epistolographic corpus in authorship attribution
Patrick Juola & George K. Mikros
Cross-linguistic correlations in lexical complexity; an
Marty Laforest, Francis Fortin & Geneviève
Bernard-Barbeau
Tweet as indication of potential danger in the real world.
How do ‘ordinary people’ and employees of law
enforcement agencies in charge of the surveillance of
Twitter treat hateful messages?
Marlon Hurt
The Language of Violent Intent in Episodic Future
Thinking
Sergei Kulikov
Enriching hate speech databases with linguistic
Meishan Chen
An exploration of stance features used in actual
courtroom discourse and TV courtroom discourse
Xin Dai
Judges’ Authorial Stance(s): an investigation of appraisal
resources in sentencing remarks
Giorgos Georgiou
Dialect use as strategy in a court domain: when a dialect
Dian Diaan Muniroh & Georgina Heydon
Investigating the Language of Police Interviewing of
Witnesses in Indonesia through a Delphi Technique
E. Allyn Smith & Myriam Raymond-Tremblay
The Role of Presupposition on Belief : An Update
12
approach to cross-linguistic authorship attribution knowledge becomes powerful
13.00
14.00
LUNCH
14.00
15.30
PARALLEL SESSION 29
Room A2
Corpus Linguistics in Forensic
Contexts
Chair: Jack Grieve
PARALLEL SESSION 30
Room SR 1
Detecting Deception
Chair: Isabel Picornell
PARALLEL SESSION 31
Room 203
Multilingual Matters
Chair: Thomas Huesgen
PARALLEL SESSION 32
Room 201
Managing Identities in Legal Contexts
Chair: Maria da Graça Lisboa Castro
Pinto
PARALLEL SESSION 33
Room SR 2
Police Interviewing
Chair: Frances Rock
Emily Powell
Sometimes being uncompassionate is the
most compassionate thing you can do’:
Negotiation of responsibility in pre-massacre
narratives
Lawrence Solan
Using Corpus Linguistics to Find the
Ordinary Meaning of Legal Terms
Edward Finegan
On the Utility and Pitfalls of Corpus Use in
Trademark Disputes
Olu Popoola
Genre violation as an indicator of deception
in online reviews
Samuel Larner
‘At the end of the day, when all is said and
done, honesty is the best policy’: formulaic
sequences as a cue to deception
Kristina Beckman-Brito & Naouress
Akrouti
“It sticks in my mind”: Evidentiality and
inconsistencies in an ex-wife’s statements
Margaret van Naerssen
The Voice Behind the Wall of a Non-Native
Speaker’s Defendant Statement
Georgina Heydon & Eliseu Mabasso
“She doesn’t need to understand the judge.”
How do legal professionals understand the
language challenges for non-Portuguese
speakers reporting domestic violence in
Mozambique
Ludmila Stern
Multilingual matters in legal contexts:
Domestic and international courts’
responses to super-diversity
Chuanyou Yuan, Taojie Lin & Jie Zheng
Identity Construction and Performance in
China’s Community Correction Discourse
Debora Cabral
Subjectivity and Identity in Judicial
Decisions
Jessi Frasier
Navigating identities through reported
speech in closing arguments
Tatiana Tkacukova & Gavin Oxburgh
Tandem interviewing strategies
Tessa van Charldorp & Wyke Stommel
Talking about ethnicity, nationality and
culture in police interrogations
Tina Pereira & Michelle Aldridge-
Waddon
Change in quality of evidence with use of
Alternative and Augmentative
Communication in police investigative
13
interviews
15.30
16.00
COFFEE BREAK
16.00
17.00
PARALLEL SESSION 34
Room A2
Communicating Forensic Linguistics
Chair: Carmen Rosa Caldas-Coulthard
PARALLEL SESSION 35
Room SR 1
Forensic Linguistic Training
Chair: Susan Berk-Seligson
PARALLEL SESSION 36
Room 203
Juvenile Suspects and the Law
Chair: João Pedro Pádua
PARALLEL SESSION 37
Room 201
Courtroom Interaction
Chair: Rosalice Pinto
PARALLEL SESSION 38
Room SR 2
Linguística Forense / Linguagem e
Direito
Chair: Virgínia Leal
Peter Gray
Teaching Lawyers how to Communicate
Lisanne van Weelden & Tessa van
Charldorp
The use of visualizations in Dutch court
Sandra Hale, Jane Goodman-
Delahunty & Natalie Martschuk
Interpreting legal discourse in a police
interview. The difference training can make
to achieving accuracy
Halina Sierocka
Are Students Good at Knowing what they
Really Need?: Developing a Profile of the
ELP Needs in the Eyes of Law Students and
Legal Professionals
Fleur van der Houwen & Guusje Jol
Juvenile court: creating (an atmosphere of)
understanding
Joseph Devney
A teenage mother in a police interview: did
she implicate her own mother in her baby’s
death?
Kirsty Blewitt
‘It’s not a story, it’s a reality’: Exploring
multi-layered interactions in adversarial
courtroom discourse
Nurshafawati Ahmad Sani
‘Invariant Tag Questions’ during Cross-
Examination in Malaysian Criminal Trials: A
corpus-based forensic discourse analysis
Vinicius Calado & Virginia Colares
Liberdade de reunião e manifestação do
pensamento na jurisprudência do STF à luz
da ACDJ
Carminda Silvestre
A Análise Multimodal de Marcas: as
interfaces do ser, interagir e fazer
17.10
18.10
PLENARY 7 - Auditorium FAUP (Faculty of Architecture)
Georgina Heydon
RMIT University
Ignorance is not bliss. How widespread misconceptions about language cause systemic failures in the justice system
Chair: Tim Grant
14
IAFL|PORTO 2017 Friday, 14 July
09.30
11.00
PARALLEL SESSION 39
Room: SR 1
Forensic Phonetics
Chair: Ana Maria Brito
PARALLEL SESSION 40
Room 204
Authorship Analysis
Chair: Tammy Gales
PARALLEL SESSION 41
Room 201
Legal Complexity(ies)
Chair: Eva Ng
PARALLEL SESSION 42
Room SR 2
Forensic Linguistics: Interdisciplinary Matters
Chair: Fleur van der Houwen
Maria Lucia de Castro Gomes
An Analysis of Diphtongs /ai/ and /ei/ in Portuguese-
English Bilingual Speakers
Claudia Regina Brescancini, Márcio Oppliger
Pinto, Denis Fernandes, Cíntia S. Gonçalves,
Felipe Bilharva, Ana Paula C. da S. Biasibetti &
Vergília S. Damé
On the Discriminating Power of Voice/Speech
Properties in Speaker Comparison Task: A Case Study
Helen Fraser
Forensic transcription: How can we ensure useful and
reliable transcripts accompany indistinct covert
recordings used as evidence in court?
Ria Perkins & Tim Grant
Politeness strategies and Native Language Influence
Detection: the benefit of using explanations in NLID.
Laura Ascone
Threat and Persuasion: two sides of the same coin
Juliane Ford
Gender change and gender disguise in online
identities
Lilia Shevyrdyaeva
Genre diversity of modern judicial discourse: a case
study of the Supreme Court of the United States and
the Constitutional court of Russia
William Eggington & Sunok Kim
Complex Legal Language in South Korea: Cause and
Effect
Jade B.Y. Du
The participation status of defendants in interpreter-
mediated courtroom interaction
Mônica Azzariti
Reflections about hostage negotiations and the
contribution of forensic linguistics
Dominique Lagorgette
Forensic linguistics in France and freedom of speech in
trial
Timothy Habick
Psychometrics and Forensic Linguistics
11.00
11.30
COFFEE BREAK
11.30
12.30
PLENARY 8 - Auditorium FAUP (Faculty of Architecture)
Peter French
University of York
15
The Forensic Speech Scientist in a Bubble … with the World Looking in
Chair: Helen Fraser
12.30
13.00
CLOSING CEREMONY
Auditorium FAUP (Faculty of Architecture)
Official carrier: Support: Financial support:
16
Faculty of Arts – Faculdade de Letras Faculty of Architecture – Porto School of Architecture