The 13 ESRs have all participated in the planned training events across the network at regular intervals throughout their 36 month contracts. The 10 training events progressed according to plan. Initially a kick-off event, held at the lead beneficiary institution (the University of East Anglia, UK) brought together the PIs from the 11 beneficiary organisations and representatives from the five partner organisations. This meeting afforded planning of future events, overviewed the recruitment strategy, and began dialogue regarding synergies and secondments across sites. Recruitment of the 13 Early Stage Researchers proceeded smoothly across sites, with all ESRs in post by the required cut-off date.
Training events progressed as anticipated, with participation from all ESRs at all events, with additional participation from other Early Stage Researchers outside the immediate DCOMM training network. We hosted events in Palma de Mallorca, Spain (Training School 1, Methods in Deictic Communication), Aarhus, Denmark (Training Course 1, Theoretical Foundations of Deictic Communication), Genoa, Italy (Workshop 1, Advanced Technologies for Deictic Communication 1), Rome, Italy (Conference 1, Language as a Form of Action), Zurich, Switzerland (Training School 2, Synergies Between Basic Research and Application), Munster, Germany (Workshop 2, Advanced Technloiges for Deictic Communication 2), Trondheim, Norway (Training School 3, Individual Differences in Deictic Communication), Jena, Germany (Training Course 2, Dissemination and Academic Skills), Manchester, UK (Training Course 3, Working with Non-academic Beneficiaries), and Norwich, UK (Conference 2, Advances in Deictic Communication).
In addition to the scheduled training events, ESRs all progressed according to plan with their local training programmes at individual sites, and with their research programmes.The ESRs were also fully engaged in the three Integrated Projects (IPs), designed to facilitate group working and pushing the ESRs to think across sectors and boundaries. These Integrated Projects examined deictic communication across gender (IP1), languages (IP2) and the ESRs also worked collaboratively on the development of a new application around deictic communication that challenged their emerging technical and entrepreneurial skills.
Overall, ESRs progressed well, and DCOMM as a whole has broken new ground in understanding deictic communication, and its applications, laying the foundation for future researchers to join this emerging interdisciplinary field.