Credits

In this program, students must pass a minimum of 44 credits. These should at least be the following:

  1. A minimum of 21 basic credits that should include:
  2. The 5 compulsory credits of the course Language and Linguistic Analysis Fundamentals
  3. The 4 compulsory credits of the Seminars

b. A minimum of 6 methodological credits that should include:

  • The 3 compulsory credits of the course Tools and Resources for Linguistic Work
  • The 3 compulsory credits of the course Language-Applied Scientific Research Methodology

c. A minimum of 12 credits during their research period, in which students prepare two research papers

  • 1. A research work (3 credits)
  • 2. A final research paper or dissertation project (9 credits)

Students may select the rest to comply with the minimum 44 credits needed from the basic, methodological and related credits offered in this and in other programs, but under the following principles: a maximum of 6 credits in related subjects and 5 credits in subjects not included the program.

Academic Structure

Academic Period

First Course (2002-2003)

Name of the Course

Credits

Character

Type

Faculty

Language and Linguistic Analysis Fundamentals

5

Comp.

Fundamental

Alsina, Clua, DeCesaris, Lorente

Seminars

4

Comp.

Fundamental

Estopà, Martí

Tools and Resources for Linguistic Work

3

Comp.

Methodological

Rovira, de Yzaguirre

Language-Applied Scientific Research Methodology

3

Comp.

Methodological

Chabás, Turell

Analysis and Applications of Variation

3

Opt.

Fundamental

Castellà, Clua,de Yzaguirre,Turell

Natural Language Processing

3

Opt.

Fundamental

Bel, de Yzaguirre, Subirats

Analysis of dictionaries and Lexicographical Projects

3

Opt.

Fundamental

Battaner,DeCesaris, Gelpí

General Terminology

3

Opt.

Fundamental

Cabré, Lorente, Martí

Tools and Resources for Linguistic Work

3

Opt.

Fundamental

Bel, de Yzaguirre

Semantics and Pragmatics

3

Opt.

Fundamental

Bel, Bonilla, González, Ribas, Subirats

Linguistic Bases of the Vocabulary

3

Opt.

Fundamental

Battaner, DeCesaris, Lorente

Documentation and Knowledge Management

3

Opt.

Fundamental

Codina, Rovira

Multidisciplinary Studies of the Discourse

3

Opt.

Fundamental

Castellà, González, Ribas, Van Dijk

 

Second Course (2002-2004)

Name of the Course

Credits

Character

Type

Faculty

Linguistic Fundamentals

5

Comp.

Fundamental

Alsina, Clua, DeCesaris, Lorente

Seminars

4

Comp.

Fundamental

Estopà, Martí

Language-Applied Scientific Research Methodology

3

Comp.

Methodological

Chabás, Turell

Tools and Resources for Linguistic Work

3

Comp.

Methodological

Bonilla, de Yzaguirre

Linguistics and Variation

4

Opt.

Fundamental

Clua, Turell

Applications to the Automatic Treatment of Language

4

Opt.

Fundamental

Bel, de Yzaguirre

Metalexicography

4

Opt.

Fundamental

Battaner, DeCesaris, Gelpí

Applied Terminology

4

Opt.

Fundamental

Estopà, Gelpí, Lorente

Specialized Discourse: Linguistic and Cognitive Aspects

4

Opt.

Fundamental

Cabré, Martí, Van Dijk

Lexicon and Syntax

4

Opt.

Fundamental

Alsina, Cabré, Lorente, Subirats

The new subjects offered by the program and that represent additional academic work are the following:

First Course:

  • Language and Linguistic Analysis Fundamentals
  • Third Cycle Seminar
  • Language-Applied Scientific Research Methodology

Second Course:

  • Applied Terminology
  • Meta-lexicography
  • Applications to the Automatic Treatment of Language
  • Linguistics and Variation
  • Specialized Discourse: Linguistic and Cognitive Aspects
  • Lexicon and Syntax

The rest of the subjects will be followed in the Applied Linguistics Ph.D. Course (2001-2003 biennial), which implies an actual academic offer of 36 new credits.

Research Period

Tutored Research Work (students should pass a total of 12 credits*) Responsible Faculty Professors

Tutored Research Work: General Discourse

Cabré, González, Martí, Ribas, Van Dijk

Tutored Research Work: Lexicon and Terminology

Cabré, Codina, Estopà, Gelpí, Lorente, Martí, Ribas

Tutored Research Work: Lexicography

Battaner, DeCesaris, Gelpí

Tutored Research Work: Linguistic Variation

Castellà, Clua, Turell

Tutored Research Work: Computerized Linguistics and Linguistic Engineering

Bel, de Yzaguirre, Rovira

Final Research Paper or Ph.D. Dissertation Project

Faculty professors responsible for the program

*These 12 research credits are distributed in a 3-credit tutored research paper and a 9-credit

dissertation project about one of the domains.

Timetable

First term: from the October 29th to the January 16th (10 weeks)

Timetable

 

Tuesday

 

Thursday

15-17.30

 

Language and Linguistic Analysis Fundamentals
Credits: 5
Coord.: E. Clua
Faculty: A. Alsina E. Clua , M. Lorente, J. DeCesaris

 

Linguistic Bases of the Vocabulary
Credits: 3
Coord.: M. Lorente
Faculty: P. Battaner , M. Lorente

18-20.30

 

Tools and Resources for Linguistic Work
Credits: 3
Coord.: L. De Yzaguirre
Faculty: L. De Yzaguirre, C. Rovira

 

Second term: from the January 20th to the March 27th (10 weeks)

Timetable

 

Monday

 

Tuesday

 

Thursday

15-17.30

 

Seminars
Credits: 4
Coord.: J. Martí and Rosa Estopà

 

General Terminology
Credits: 3
Coord. and Faculty: M. Teresa Cabré

 

Analysis and Applications of Variation
Credits: 3
Coord.: M. T. Turell
Faculty: J. M. Castellà, M. T. Turell

18-20.30

     

Documentation and Knowledge Management
Credits: 3
Coord.: L. Codina
Faculty: L. Codina , C. Rovira

 

Natural Language Processing
Credits: 3
Coord.: N. Bel
Faculty: N. Bel, L. De Yzaguirre

 

Third term: from the March 31st to the June 19th (10 weeks)

(the week from the April 21st to the 25th the classes will be stopped)

 

Timetable

 

Monday

 

Tuesday

 

Thursday

15-17.30

 

Seminars
Coord.: J. Martí and Rosa Estopà

 

Semantics and Pragmatics
Credits: 3
Coord.: S. Bonilla
Faculty: N. Bel , S. Bonilla, M. González

 

Analysis of dictionaries and Lexicographical Projects
Credits: 3
Coord.: P. Battaner
Faculty: P. Battaner , J. DeCesaris , C. Gelpí

18-20.30

     

Language-Applied Scientific Research Methodology
Credits: 3
Coord.: M. T. Turell
Faculty: J. Chabàs, M. T. Turell

 

Multidisciplinary Studies of the Discourse
Credits: 3
Coord.: T. Van Dijk
Faculty: M. Ribas, T. Van Dijk

 

Course Description

First Course

Language and Linguistic Analysis Fundamentals

5 credits
fundamental
compulsory

Objectives

The main objectives of this course-with a propaedeutic character-are to expose the theoretical and methodological fundamentals of the components of linguistics (phonology, morphology, syntax, and semantics), the acquisition of a solid linguistic analysis methodology, and the introduction of different contemporary linguistic models.

Bibliography

CRUSE, D. A. (2000) Meaning in language. An introduction to semantics and pragmatics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

DURAND, J. (1990) Fundamentos de fonología generativa y no-lineal. Barcelona: Teide, 1992

JACKENDOFF, R. (1997) The Architecture of the Language Faculty. Cambridge (Mass.): The MIT Press.

RADFORD, A. et al. (1999) Introducción a la lingüística. Madrid: Cambridge University Press, 2000

SELLS, P. (1985) Teorías sintácticas actuales. Barcelona: Teide, 1989.

SPENCER, A. (1991) Morphological Theory. Oxford: Blackwell.

Tools and Resources for Linguistic Work

3 credits
methodological
compulsory

Objectives

This subject pretends to present and use, on the one hand, specific tools such as corpus consultation programs, terminological database or documentary managers, different kinds of tagging or labeling tools and lexicometrical applications, and, on the other hand, all the computer resources that could be valuable for linguistic research.

Bibliography

BUTLER, C. (ed.) (1992) Computer and written texts. Londres: Blackwell.

HABERT, B. et al. Les linguistiques de corpus. Paris: Armand Colin

KRISHNAMURTHY, R. (1997) Keeping Good Company: Collocation, Corpus, and Dictionaries. IULA, Cicle de conferències 95-96. Barcelona: IULA

SINCLAIR, J. (1991) Corpus, Concordance, Collocation. Oxford: OUP.

Language-Applied Scientific Research Methodology

3 credits
methodological
compulsory

Objectives

This subject has three basic objectives. Firstly, to familiarize students with epistemological issues of science and research to increase knowledge. The historic clarification of scientific development will be an important ingredient of this first objective. The second objective will be to make some reflections about the methods applied to language research: explicative theories, problems, data collection, descriptions and experiments, qualitative and quantitative methods for data analysis, applications. The third objective will be to present the research process from three fundamental facts: a) the decision level; that is, why do we research; b) the realization level, which is the research's design, and c) the execution level; therefore, the techniques to collect data and their treatment.

Bibliography

ALCARAZ, E. (1990) Tres paradigmas de la investigación lingüística. Alcoi: Ed. Marfil.

BUNGE, M. (1989 2a) trad. cast. La investigación científica, su estrategia y su filosofía Barcelona: Ariel.

HATCH, E.; H. FARHADY (1982) Research Design and Statistics for Applied Linguistics. Cambridge, (Mass.): Newsbury House.

LAKATOS, I. (1978) trad. Cast. La metodología de los programas de investigación científica. Madrid: Alianza ed. 1983.

LÓPEZ MORALES, H. (1994) Métodos de investigación lingüística. Salamanca, De: Colegio de España.

PERCIVAL, W.K. (1976) "The applicability of Kuhn's paradigms to the history of linguistics", Language (52/2), p. 285-29

Seminars

4 credits
fundamental
obligatory

Objectives

The Seminars will consist of the presentation and discussion of projects and/or research papers. Participation will be mostly of students of the third cycle (who will present their research work as collaborations with research projects, as well as Ph.D. thesis-oriented and/or dissertation draft-oriented activities, and research papers). The sessions of the General Seminar will be distributed throughout the course and will be covering all the aspects of applied linguistics that carry an important weight in this Ph.D. program (and in IULA's research activities in general). Furthermore, the General Seminar will try to especially consider methodological aspects. The participation of foreign professors will be included, as well as the program's specific cycle of conferences and seminars.

Multidisciplinary Studies of the Discourse

3 credits
fundamental
optional
Domain: General and Specialized Discourse
Multidisciplinary Studies of the Discourse

Objectives

One of the most significant developments in the study of discourse in recent years is its increasing multidisciplinary nature. This subject studies this multidisciplinary character with an examination of some of the relations between the structure and the strategies of the discourse, on the one side, and the structures and the cognitive and social processes, on the other.

Bibliography

SANDERS, T. (1997) "Semantic and Pragmatic Sources of Coherence: On the Categorization of Coherence Relations in Context." In Spooren, W. And Risselada, R. (eds.): Discourse Processes, Volume 24. Greenwich: Connecticut. Ablex Publishing Corporation, p. 119-147.

van DIJK, T. (ed.) (2000) Estudios del discurso. 2 vols. Barcelona, Gedisa.

van DIJK, T. (1999) Ideología. Barcelona, Gedisa.

WODAK, R. & MEYER, M. (eds.) (2001) Methods of Critical Discourse Analysis. London, Sage.

Analysis and Applications of Variation

3 credits
fundamental
optional
Domain: Linguistic Variation

Objectives:

This subject studies the casuistic of variation and is a critical (re)analysis of the linguistic descriptions from a variation-oriented perspective. A second objective is to illustrate the variation-oriented perspective in different application domains: the creation of grammars and descriptive dictionaries, diachronic analysis and dialectology, standardization and normative prescription, translation, forensics linguistics, orthologic diagnostic techniques and orthological formation of locution and oral correctors, linguistic localization and globalization, preparation of didactic materials, analysis of the community of language.

Bibliography

BIBER, D., S. CONRAD, I R. REPPEN (1998). Corpus linguistics. Investigating

language structure and use. Cambridge University Press.

BJARKMAN, P.C. i V. RASKIN (eds.) (1986) The real-world linguist. Ablex: Norwood.

DI PETRO, R. J. (ed.) (1982) Linguistics and the professions, Ablex: Norwood.

GIBBONS, J. (ed.) (1994) Language and the law, Longman: Londres.

SOLA, J. (1990) Lingüística i normativa, Empúries: Barcelona.

General Terminology: Specialized Knowledge and Language

3 credits
f
undamental
optional
Domain: Lexicon and Terminology

Objectives

This subject will introduce students into terminology as an interdisciplinary field that includes knowledge, language, and communication. Its fundamentals, its evolution, and its applications will be discussed in the framework of a multi-modular theory, which includes epistemology, language theory, and discourse theory.

Bibliography

CABRÉ, M. T. (1999) Terminology: theory, methods and applications. Editat per J. C. Sager. Traduït del català per J. A. DeCesaris. Amsterdam; Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company, XII, 252 p. Hb: 90-272-1633-9; Pb: 90-272-1634-7.

CABRÉ, M. T.; FELIU, J. (2001) La terminología científico-técnica: reconocimiento, análisis y extracción de información formal y semántica. Barcelona: IULA.

SAGER, J-C (1990) A practical course in Terminology Processing. Amsterdam; Filadelfia: John Benjamins. [Traducció castellana: Curso práctico sobre el procesamiento de la terminología. Madrid: Fundación Germán Sánchez Ruipérez, 1993].

PEARSON, J. (1998) Terms in Context. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company.

REY, A. (1995) Essays on Terminology. Traducció i edició de J.C. Sager i introducció de B. de Bessé. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company.

TEMMERMAN, R. (2000) Towards news ways of terminology description: the sociocognitive-approach. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.

Analysis of Dictionaries and Lexicographical Projects

3 credits
fundamental
optional
Domain: Lexicography

Objectives

This subject has, as its objective, the practical analysis of the macro- and microstructure of dictionaries that come from different lexicographical traditions, and the study of lexicographical projects: objectives, materials, and results.

Bibliography

BATTENBURG, J. (1991) English monolingual learners' dictionaries: a user-oriented study. Tübingen: Max Niemeyer.

HAUSMANN, F. J. (1989-1991) Worterbucher. Dictionaries. Dictionnaires. Nova York: Walter de Gruyter.

BÉJOINT, H. i P. THOIRON (1996) Les dictionnaires bilingües. Louvain-La-Neuve: Duculot.

Natural Language Processing

3 credits
fundamental
optional
Domain: Computerized Linguistics and Linguistic Engineering

Objectives

This subject pretends to introduce students into the study and the understanding of natural language's and algorithm's underlying computational properties, methods, and techniques for linguistic information processing. This subject will present the symbolic and quantitative techniques for morphologic, syntactic and semantic processing from a linguistic and algorithmic perspective.

Bibliography

ALLEN, J. (1995) Natural Language Understanding. Redwood City, Calif. (second edition): Benjamin/Cummings Publishing Company.

JURAFSKY, D.; MARTIN, J. (2000) Speech and Language Processing. Prentice Hall.

Linguistic Bases of the Vocabulary

3 credits
fundamentals
optional
transversal

Objectives

The objective of this lexicological subject is to analyze how the different linguistic aspects of the lexicon-which are proper of the proficiency of speakers as well as of the variation of its use-, become visible in the description and representation of data in linguistic applications to insure coherence with the theoretical statements and the consistency of the data.

Bibliography

CRUSE, D. A. (1986) Lexical Semantics. Cambridge: CUP

LEHMANN, A; MARTIN-BERTHET, F. (2000) Introduction à la lexicologie sémantique et morphologie. Paris: Nathan.

LEVIN, Beth; PINKER, Steven (ed.) (1991) Lexical & Conceptual Semantics. Cambridge & Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 1992.

LORENTE, M. (1994) Aspectes de lexicografia: representació i interpretació gramaticals. Barcelona: IULA [format CD] (en premsa).

PUSTEJOVSKY, J. (1995) The Generative Lexicon. Cambridge: The MIT Press.

Semantics and Pragmatics

3 credits
fundamental
optional
transversal

Objectives

The objectives of this subject are to offer an integral view of semantics and pragmatics by analyzing the key concepts and the functioning of the models: formal semantics (sense and reference, the principle of composition), lexical semantics, conceptual semantics (prototypes, radial categories, metaphors, polysemy), the theory of the act of speech (intention, indirection), the theory of conversational implication (inferential protocols), the theory of relevance (inference, explanation, access to the reference, markers or labels and relevance areas), models of discursive coherence, idea and pragmatic structure of the text (semantic-argumentative marks or labels versus pragmatics).

Bibliography

BACH, E. (1990): Informal Lectures on Formal Semantics, Albany, State

University of New York Press.

CABRÉ, T. & RIGAU, G. (1987) Lexicologia i Semàntica. Barcelona. Enciclopèdia Catalana.

LAKOFF, G. (1987): Women, Fire, and Dangerous Things, Chicago, Chicago

University Press.

SANDERS, T. (1997): Semantic and Pragmatic Sources of Coherence: On the

Categorization of Coherence Relations in Context. In Spooren, W. and

Risselada, R. (eds.): Discourse Processes, Volume 24. Greenwich:

Connecticut. Ablex Publishing Corporation, pp. 119-147

WILSON, D. & D. SPERBER (1993): "Linguistic Form and Relevance", Lingua, 90, 1993, 1-26.

Documentation and Knowledge Management

3 credits
fundamental
optional
transversal

Objectives

This subject has two general objectives: to acquire knowledge about the on-line research systems and methods: search drivers, databases, selective information diffusion services; and to acquire knowledge about how to organize navigation and access to information in digital publications related to the representation of knowledge.

Bibliography

ABADAL, E. Els serveis d'informació electrònica, què són i per a què serveixen. Barcelona: Edicions Universitat de Barcelona, 1997.

ACKERMANN, E.; HARTMAN, K. The information specialist's guide to searching and researching on the Internet and the World Wide Web. Wilsonville: ABF Content, 1998.

BASCH, R.; BATES, M. E. Researching online for dummies. Foster: IDG, 2000.

CABRÉ, T. "La noció de normalització terminològica per al treball documental". En: Cid, P.; Baró, J. (Eds.). Anuari SOCADI de Documentació i Informació. Barcelona: SOCADI, 1998, p. 113-120.

CODINA, L. "La WWW desde la perspectiva de la investigación en línea". Quark, n. 18, enero-junio 2000, p. 32-37.

CODINA, L. El libro digital y la WWW. Madrid: Tauro, 2000.

ROVIRA, C. El disseny de navegació i l'organització de continguts en l'hipertext per a l'ensenyament-aprenentatge. Barcelona, 2001 (tesi doctoral).

Second Course

Linguistics and Variation

3 credits
fundamental
optional
Domain: Linguistic Variation

Objectives

The objectives of this subject are to present the theory of variation and to offer a general overview of the internal and external dimensions of variation in natural language. It examines variability as an inherent characteristic of language (phonological, syntactic and semantic-pragmatic variation), variation and linguistic modification, variation as an analytic method, and the socio-linguistic view of variation.

Bibliography

CHAMBERS, J.K. and P. TRUDGILL (1998) Dialectology (2nd. ed.), Cambridge: CUP.

LABOV, W. (1994) Principles of linguistic change. Londres: Blackwell.

Romaine, S. (1992) Socio-historical linguistics. Cambridge: CUP.

Applied Terminology

3 credits
fundamental
optional
Domain: Lexicon and Terminology

Objectives

This subject has three proposed objectives. The first objective is to give a panoramic view about the applications of specialized lexicons (dictionaries: specialized lexicographic typology and other applications: terminological engineering, thesaurus, terminology teaching modules). The second objective is to offer analysis criteria of specialized lexicographical works (specialized meta-lexicography and meta-terminology). The third objective is to offer a methodology for the treatment of data and the creation of specialized dictionaries, and the application of this methodology (the elaboration of terminological models).

Bibliography

BERGENHOLTZ, H; TARP, S. (1995) Manual of specialised lexicography: the preparation of specialised dictionaries. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company.

CABRÉ, M. T.; FELIU, J. (2001) La terminologia científico-técnica: reconocimiento, análisis y extracción de información formal y semántica. Barcelona: IULA.

SAGER, J-C (1990) A practical course in Terminology Processing. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company. [Traducció castellana: Curso práctico sobre el procesamiento de la terminología. Madrid: Fundación Germán Sánchez Ruipérez, 1993].

WRIGHT, Sue-Ellen; BUDIN, Gerhard. (eds.) (1984) Handbook of Terminology Management. Volume I. Basic Aspects of Terminology Management. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company.

Metalexicography

3 credits
fundamental
optional
Domain: Lexicography

Objectives

This subject has the objectives of studying the main issues contemplated by lexicography and the solutions offered by dictionaries.

Bibliography

HAUSMANN, F. J. (1989-1991) Worterbucher. Dictionaries. Dictionnaires. Nova York: Walter de Gruyter.

LARA, L.F (1997) Teoría del diccionario monolingüe. Mèxic: El Colegio de México.

SINCLAIR, J. (1988) Looking up. An account of the COBUILD project in lexical computing and the development of the Collins COBUILD English Language Dictionary. Londres: Collins.

SVENSEN, B. (1993) Practical lexicography. Principles and methods of dictionary-making. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Applications to the Automatic Treatment of Language

3 credits
fundamental
optional
Domain: Computerized Linguistics and Linguistic Engineering

Objectives

To show the way how computerized treatment of language is applied with concrete goals: information management, translation and interfacing in natural language.

Bibliography

DALE, Robert; MOISL, H.; SOMMERS, H. (eds.): Handbook of Natural Language Processing. New York: Dekker, 2000.

Specialized Discourse: Linguistic and Cognitive Aspects

3 credits

fundamental

optional

Domain: General and Specialized Discourse

Objectives

This subject has three proposed objectives. The first one is to present-by textual analysis-the most relevant aspects of specialized knowledge through linguistic data, and to analyze its specificity in relation to general knowledge, and to examine the ways to acquire and to store both types of knowledge. The second objective is to perform the analysis of texts in conceptual structures (thematic hierarchies, thesaurus). The third objective is to present the bases of information retrieval by using these structures.

Bibliography

CIAPUSCIO, G. (1992) Ciencia para el lego: investigaciones sobre textos de divulgación científica. Alemanya: Universitat de Bielefeld

DUBOIS, D. (1993) Sémantique et cognition. Catégories, prototypes, typicalité. París: Edicions CNRS

SALTON, G. (1983) Introduction to modern information retrieval. Nova York: McGraw-Hill.

Lexicon and Syntax

3 credits
fundamental
optional
transversal

Objectives

This subject pretends to intensify the description, the analysis and the generalization of lexicological and syntactic phenomena by concentrating on the issues of the interrelations between the lexicon and syntax. The description of the data will allow to influence in the methodological aspects of the representation and classification of linguistic units.

Bibliography

ALSINA, A. (1996) The Role of Argument Structure in Grammar. Evidence from Romance. Stanford: CSLI Publications.

KAY, P. (1997) Words and the grammar of context. Stanford: CSLI Publications.

LEVIN, B.; RAPPAPORT, M. (1995) Unaccusativity at the syntax-lexical semantics interface. Cambridge: The MIT Press.

SUBIRATS RÜGGEBERG, C. (2001) Introducción a la sintaxis léxica del español. Frankfurt: Vervuert.

Research

Research Domains and Groups

The research domains that have been proposed for this Ph.D. course are the following:

  • General discourse and specialized discourse
  • Lexicon and terminology
  • Lexicography
  • Computerized linguistics and linguistic engineering
  • Linguistic variation

Students should register in one of these domains after finishing the program's first course. After registering, they will participate in the seminar on the related methodology and they will be included in their research period.

Research Papers and Ph.D. Dissertations

Research papers and Ph.D. dissertations should be limited to one of the research domains open in the Ph.D. program. In every case, the decision on the subject and the methodology of research work is a shared responsibility by students and the faculty members who are responsible for each research subject.

Research Proficiency and Advanced Studies Diploma

Students, once they have passed the two periods of the program, must make a public oral presentation before a faculty tribunal about the knowledge they have acquired and about the research work they have carried out. Based on their tutors' proposal, the director of the program will determine the area of knowledge to which the research proficiency will be granted to each student. With the approval of the faculty tribunal, Ph.D. candidates will be guaranteed their research proficiency to obtain the Diploma on Advanced Studies crediting the advanced studies taken and certifying the recognition of the work carried out in a particular knowledge area.

The research proficiency tribunal for this biennial is formed by professors: M. Teresa Turell, Ph.D. (president), Mercé Lorente, Ph.D., and Maria Bargalló, Ph.D. (RVU). M. Teresa Cabré, Ph.D. (president), Paz Battaner, Ph.D., and Esther Forgues, Ph.D. (RVU), will form the substitute tribunal.