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Psycholinguistics
Linguistics Faculty
Mary E. Beckman, Professor of Linguistics
(Appointed 1985) A.B., (Oriental Langs. & Comparative Literature),
University of California, Berkeley, 1976 M.A., (Oriental
Languages), University of
California, Berkeley, 1979 M.A., (Linguistics), Cornell
University, 1982 Ph.D., (Linguistics), Cornell University, 1984
Areas of Specialization: Experimental
Phonetics, Laboratory Phonology, East Asian Languages.
Peter
Culicover, Professor and Chair, Linguistics; Director, Center for Cognitive
Science
(Appointed 1987) Chair of Department 1998-Present, B.A., (Mathematics),
City College of New York, 1966 Ph.D., (Linguistics), Massachusetts Institute
of Technology,1971
Areas of specialization: Syntactic theory, English grammar,
language learnability.
Neal
F. Johnson, Professor of Psychology and Adjunct Professor of Linguistics
B.A. Minnesota, 1956; Ph.D. Minnesota, 1961. Linguistically
oriented courses taught: Psychology 602, The Psychology of Listening and
Reading; Psychology 604, The Psychology of Language.
Areas of Specialization: Psychologuistics, memory
Mineharu Nakayama,
Associate Professor of East Asian Languages and Literatures (Syntax, Psycholinguistics),
and Adjunct Associate Professor of Linguistics
B.A.Waseda University, 1983; M.A. University of Connecticut,
1986 (Linguistics); Ph.D. University of Connecticut, 1988.
Areas of specialization: Language acquisition, syntax, sentence
processing, learnability, language teaching; Japanese Syntax
Mark
Pitt, Associate Professor of Psychology and Adjunct Assistant Professor
of Linguistics
B.A. UCLA, 1984, M.S. Yale University, 1988, Ph.D. Yale University.
Linguistically oriented couses taught: Psychology 602, Psychology of listening
and reading; Psychology 302, Introduction to listening and reading. It
is a broader introductory version of 602, to be taught for the first time
(WI 1997). Gradute seminars on speech perception/auditory word recognition.
Areas of specialization: Phonological and lexical influences in
speech perception/word recognition
Shari
Speer, Associate Professor of Linguistics
B.A. Avila College, 1978, M.A. Claremont Graduate School, 1981,
Ph.D. University of Texas at Austin, 1988 (Human Experimental Psychology).
Linguistically oriented couses taught: Linguistics/Psychology 615, Psycholinguistics;
Linguistics/Psychology 371, Language and Mind. Gradute seminars on sentence
and discourse level language processing.
Areas of specialization: Psycholinguistics, Prosodic structure
and syntactic structure in language comprehension and production.
Graduate Courses in Psycholinguistics
(see also courses in Cognitive
Science, Computer
Science, and Psychology
).
Related Programs/Centers:
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