Gender Expressions
Woman
Birgit Hellwig
Birgit Hellwig
Birgit Hellwig studied African Linguistics at the Universities of Bayreuth and Hamburg (Germany) and she received her PhD in Linguistics from the University of Nijmegen (Netherlands). She is now at the University of Cologne (Germany), where she combines language documentation, acquisition and socialization. In 2014, she and her team started documenting the language used with […]
Birgit Hellwig studied African Linguistics at the Universities of Bayreuth and Hamburg (Germany) and she received her PhD in Linguistics from the University of Nijmegen (Netherlands). She is now at the University of Cologne (Germany), where she combines language documentation, acquisition and socialization. In 2014, she and her team started documenting the language used with and by Qaqet children in Papua New Guinea (https://qaqet.phil-fak.uni-
Participation
Elaine J. Francis
Elaine J. Francis
Elaine J. Francis is a professor in the Department of English at Purdue University, where she has been teaching linguistics and directing the Experimental Linguistics Lab since 2003. She completed her PhD in linguistics at the University of Chicago in 1999 and taught for three years in the Department of English at the University of […]
Elaine J. Francis is a professor in the Department of English at Purdue University, where she has been teaching linguistics and directing the Experimental Linguistics Lab since 2003. She completed her PhD in linguistics at the University of Chicago in 1999 and taught for three years in the Department of English at the University of Hong Kong. In her research, she investigates syntactic, discourse, and processing-based factors that affect the realization of syntactic alternations in English and Cantonese. Her research articles have been published in journals including Cognitive Linguistics, Journal of Linguistics, Language and Cognition, Linguistics, Natural Language and Linguistic Theory, and Lingua. She is the co-editor with Laura Michaelis of the edited collection Mismatch: Form-Function Incongruity and the Architecture of Grammar (CSLI Publications, 2003) and the author of the forthcoming book Gradient Acceptability and Linguistic Theory (Oxford University Press, 2022).
Participation
Gabriella Vigliocco
Gabriella Vigliocco
Gabriella is Professor of the Psychology of Language at University College London where she leads the Language and Cognition Lab (www.language-cognition-lab.org). She received her PhD in Experimental Psychology from University of Trieste. Before moving to UCL, she has worked at University of Arizona, the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics and the University of Wisconsin. Her […]
Gabriella is Professor of the Psychology of Language at University College London where she leads the Language and Cognition Lab (www.language-cognition-lab.
Her work is interdisciplinary, bringing together theoretical insights from psychology, linguistics, neuroscience, philosophy and computer science. She uses methods from psychology, cognitive neuroscience and computational modelling, integrating evidence from different languages and different populations (adults, children, deaf individuals using British Sign Language, as well as individuals who have developed aphasia or apraxia after brain damage).
Participation
Gemma Boleda
Gemma Boleda
Gemma Boleda is an ICREA Research Professor in the Department of Translation and Language Sciences of the Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain, where she heads the Computational Linguistics and Linguistic Theory (COLT) research group. She previously held post-doctoral positions at the Department of Linguistics of The University of Texas at Austin, USA, and the CIMEC Center […]
Gemma Boleda is an ICREA Research Professor in the Department of Translation and Language Sciences of the Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain, where she heads the Computational Linguistics and Linguistic Theory (COLT) research group. She previously held post-doctoral positions at the Department of Linguistics of The University of Texas at Austin, USA, and the CIMEC Center for Brain/Mind Sciences of the University of Trento, Italy. In her research, currently funded by an ERC Starting Grant, Dr. Boleda uses quantitative and computational methods to better understand how natural languages convey meaning. She is a member of the standing review committee of the TACL journal. She acted as area co-chair of ACL 2016, program co-chair of *SEM 2015, and local co-chair of ESSLLI 2015, and was an elected Information Officer of the SIGSEM Board 2013-2020.
Participation
Hamida Demirdache
Hamida Demirdache
Hamida Demirdache is professor of linguistics at the University of Nantes, and member of the LLiNG Lab (UMR6310, CNRS/UN). Her interests lie at the syntax, semantics and language acquisition interfaces. Her research seeks to integrate theoretical and experimental methodologies to probe issues at these interfaces across a variety of typologically different adult and child languages. […]
Hamida Demirdache is professor of linguistics at the University of Nantes, and member of the LLiNG Lab (UMR6310, CNRS/UN). Her interests lie at the syntax, semantics and language acquisition interfaces. Her research seeks to integrate theoretical and experimental methodologies to probe issues at these interfaces across a variety of typologically different adult and child languages. She is particularly interested in understanding how languages express (and children acquire) concepts that are essentially abstract (e.g. tense, quantification) and which all languages convey while showing a widespread variation in the means used to linguistically express them across languages. What are the source and limits of crosslinguistic diversity at these interfaces?
Participation
Hannah Gibson
Hannah Gibson
Hannah Gibson is a linguist based at University of Essex. Her work is concerned primarily with linguistic variation, multilingualism and language contact. She has conducted research in eastern and southern Africa.
Hannah Gibson is a linguist based at University of Essex. Her work is concerned primarily with linguistic variation, multilingualism and language contact. She has conducted research in eastern and southern Africa.
Participation
Inbal Arnon
Inbal Arnon
Prof. Arnon is a linguist and developmental psycholinguist. Her main interests are first language acquisition, learning theory, psycholinguistics, and the way cognitive biases impact language emergence and structure. Her research lies at the intersection of Linguistics, Psychology, and Cognitive Science and uses a variety of experimental methods to explore how language is learned and how […]
Prof. Arnon is a linguist and developmental psycholinguist. Her main interests are first language acquisition, learning theory, psycholinguistics, and the way cognitive biases impact language emergence and structure. Her research lies at the intersection of Linguistics, Psychology, and Cognitive Science and uses a variety of experimental methods to explore how language is learned and how learning changes as a function of prior knowledge and experience.
Participation
Jacyra Andrade Mota
Jacyra Andrade Mota
Jacyra Andrade Mota é Professora Emérita da Universidade Federal da Bahia. É a atual diretora presidente do Projeto Atlas Linguístico do Brasil (ALiB). Possui graduação em Letras pela Universidade Federal da Bahia (1961), mestrado em Letras e Lingüística pela Universidade Federal da Bahia (1980) e doutorado em Letras Vernáculas pela Universidade Federal do Rio de […]
Jacyra Andrade Mota é Professora Emérita da Universidade Federal da Bahia. É a atual diretora presidente do Projeto Atlas Linguístico do Brasil (ALiB). Possui graduação em Letras pela Universidade Federal da Bahia (1961), mestrado em Letras e Lingüística pela Universidade Federal da Bahia (1980) e doutorado em Letras Vernáculas pela Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (2002). É pesquisadora e bolsista do CNPq, atuando na área de Sociolinguística e Dialetologia.
Participation
Michelle Sheehan
Michelle Sheehan
Michelle Sheehan specialises in comparative syntax and syntactic theory but also has interests in the syntax/semantic interface, the philosophy of langauge and the use of linguistics in language teaching.
Michelle Sheehan specialises in comparative syntax and syntactic theory but also has interests in the syntax/semantic interface, the philosophy of langauge and the use of linguistics in language teaching.
Participation
Sun-Ah Jun
Sun-Ah Jun
Sun-Ah Jun is a Professor at UCLA, Department of Linguistics (Ph.D at Ohio State University, 1993). She has also taught at the Linguistic Society of America (LSA) Summer Institute and at the Netherlands Graduate School of Linguistics (LOT) Summer School. Her research interests include intonational phonology, prosodic typology, the effect of prosody in segment perception […]
Sun-Ah Jun is a Professor at UCLA, Department of Linguistics (Ph.D at Ohio State University, 1993). She has also taught at the Linguistic Society of America (LSA) Summer Institute and at the Netherlands Graduate School of Linguistics (LOT) Summer School. Her research interests include intonational phonology, prosodic typology, the effect of prosody in segment perception and sentence processing, the interface between prosody/syntax/focus, and language acquisition.