We're so happy to see them doing well!
28 December 2011
Featured Alumni
We're so happy to see them doing well!
19 December 2011
Congratulations!
10 December 2011
New Year's preview: USC at the LSA!
Hilton Portland & Executive Tower
921 SW Sixth Avenue
Portland, Oregon 97204
Tel: 1-503-226-1611
Fax: 1-503-220-2565
More info on the event can be found here: http://www.lsadc.org/info/meet-annual.cfm#preliminary-program
05 December 2011
December highlights
Michal Temkin-Martinez, who received her PhD in linguistics from USC in 2009 and now teaches at Boise State, is featured in a very interesting article where she talks about her projects on endangered languages and more personal matters. We are glad that she is doing so well! The full article can be found here. Don't miss it!
Sarah Ouwayda traveled to Leiden and gave a talk at the University of Leiden entitled "Two types of ‘plural’ in Arabic Nouns: Counting and Agreeing". Here's a picture from the trip - Lots of bikes in Leiden!
22 November 2011
Update on November highlights
06 November 2011
November highlights!
Erika Varis: Phonetic vowel hiatus in Spanish
Christina Hagedorn, Mike Proctor, and Louis Goldstein (with Shrikanth
Narayanan): Automatic Analysis of Constriction Location in Singleton
and Geminate Consonant Articulation using Real-time Magnetic Resonance
Imaging
Daylen Riggs and Dani Byrd: The Scope of Prosodic Lengthening:
Articulatory and Acoustic Evidence
Khalil Iskarous: In defense of Discrete Features
Fang-Ying Hsieh: Diphthong centralization and reduction in constriction degree
Mike Proctor (with Athanasios Katsamanis): Prosodic characterization
of reading styles using audio book corpora
Mike Proctor (with Daniel Bone, Yoon Kim, and Shrikanth Narayanan):
Semi-automatic modeling of tongue surfaces using volumetric structural
MRI
Louis Goldstein and Mike Proctor (with Adam Lammert): Analysis of
rhythmic entrainment in speech production using real-time magnetic
resonance imaging
Sandy Disner (with Sean Fulop): Examining the voice bar
Canan Ipek: Acoustic correlates of narrow focus in Turkish
Ben Parrell, Louis Goldstein and Dani Byrd (with Adam Lammert and
Shrikanth Narayanan): Imaging and quantification of glottal kinematics
with ultrasound during speech
contextual bias on idiom processing
Arunima Choudhury and Elsi Kaiser: Prosodic focus in Bangla: A
psycholinguistic investigation of production and perception
Michael Shepherd and Julia Wang: The role of elementary classroom discourse
in the initial construction of student identities
Daylen Riggs: Consonant clusters in loanwords: Fijian and cross-linguistic
data
Rachel Walker: Linguistics in a general education science course
Elsi Kaiser: Effects of information structure on the production and
comprehension of referring expressions.
14 October 2011
SCROLL issue for the week of October 17, 2011
Phonlunch: Peter Ara Guekguezian 'Prosodic Morphology in Chukchansi Yokuts' Linguistics Reading Room - October 26th 1:00 - 2:00h
26 September 2011
SCROLL issue for the week of September 26, 2011
Linguistics Reading Room (GFS 330) - Sept 26th
September 19th: Khalil Iskarous
September 26th: Nancy Hall
October 3rd: Reading for Matt Goldrick Colloquium
October 10th: Daylen Riggs
October 17th: Karen Jesney
October 26th: Peter Guekguezian
November 7th: Reading for Michael Kenstowicz Colloquium
November 14th: Christina Hagedorn
November 21st: Mike Proctor
November 28th: Daylen Riggs
USC Linguists at Sinn und Bedeutung:
Mythili Menon: “Two ways of forming comparatives in Malayalam”
Sarah Ouwayda: “Cardinals, Agreement, and Plurality in Lebanese Arabic”
USC Linguists at NELS:
Katy McKinney-Bock: "An Argument for Interval Semantics of Gradable Adjectives"
Sarah Ouwayda: "Plurality, Agreement, and Interpretation"
USC Linguists at LSA:
Iris C-Y Ouyang & Elsi Kaiser: "Focus-marking in a tone language: Prosodic cues in Mandarin Chinese."
Editors: Alfredo GarcÃa Pardo, Iris C-Y Ouyang, Sarah Ouwayda, and Roumyana Pancheva
17 September 2011
Department Picnic
16 September 2011
Colloquium schedule 2011-2012
Monday, October 3rd - Matt Goldrick (Northwestern)
Behavioral studies of language processing (Psycholinguistics, Cognitive neuropsychology, Acoustic phonetics); Mathematical and computational models of language processing; Generative phonology; Optimality Theory and Harmonic Grammar
Monday November 7th - Michael Kenstovicz (MIT)
Phonology, Phonetics, African and East Asian Languages
Monday, November 14th - Ian Roberts (Cambridge University)
Comparative syntax
Ian Roberts received his PhD from the USC Department of Linguistics in 1985. His dissertation, supervised by Osvaldo Jaeggli, was entitled The Representation of Implicit and Dethematized Subjects.
Semantics, Pragmatics, Syntax-Semantics interface, Phonology, PhoneticsSemitic linguistics
Phonology, Phonetics
Monday, April 16th - Michael Wagner (McGill)
Prosody/Syntax, Prosody/Semantics, Phonology, Language Processing
10 September 2011
Summer Highlights
Christina Hagedorn presented a poster at the 9th International Seminar on Speech Production, in Montreal at the end of June. Then, in July, she attended a summer school on robust statistics in Bertinoro, Italy. At the end of August, she gave a talk at Interspeech 2011, in Florence, Italy.
Jim Higginbotham was Visiting Professor at the University of Oxford in the Trinity Term (late April-late June), and gave five lectures, mostly on the "de se." He spoke also at a Workshop in Cambridge (Ian Roberts and Company). Finally, Barry Smith and Jim gave two lectures each and participated in a Q&A session before a large audience all day 28 May at Rewley House, Oxford, on "Knowledge of Meaning."
Jim’s Oxford contract has been renewed for the next two years, so something like the last adventure will be repeated.
Elsi Kaiser attended Sofiana Chiriacescu's dissertation defense at the University of Stuttgart in Germany in July (Sofiana was a visiting student at USC last semester). Elsi also gave a talk at Stuttgart and at a conference in France. Right now she is returning from the main psycholinguistics conference in Europe, AMLaP (Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing), which was held in Paris Sept 1-Sept 3.
Sarah Ouwayda spent June and July in Lebanon, where she worked on her qualifying paper, and attended muntadaa Taraablus al-shi?ri (The Tripoli Forum for Classical Arabic poetry). She attended the European Summer School in Logic, Language, and Information (ESSLLI) in Ljubljana in August, passed her candidacy defense at the end of August, and gave a talk on Cardinals, Agreement, and Plurality in Lebanese Arabic in Sinn und Bedeutung (SuB) in Utrecht in September. She will be giving a talk entitled Agreement and Interpretation at the North East Linguistics Society (NELS) in Toronto in November.
6pm view from underneath the ESSLLI site
In late May, Roumyana Pancheva gave an invited talk at the Linguistics Colloquium at UC Santa Cruz. She spent 3 weeks in late July and early August at the NYI summer school in St. Petersburg, Russia, teaching an advanced class on Meaning and Structure and co-teaching an introductory class on Universals of Language with John Bailyn and Jaye Padgett. She spent the rest of August with her family in Barcelona and Costa Brava
Barbara Tomaszewicz spent July running experiments in Barcelona which was made possible by the summer grant from USC Dornsife College Del Amo Foundation and the wonderful people associated with GLiF at UPF. She then attended the ESSLLI summer school in Ljubljana.
Erika Varis’s summer consisted of baby Remy and quals. :) She had a baby, finished her quals paper 2 weeks postpartum, completed the questions, and successfully defended. She is exploring a few more options from the quals data to inform the details of the dissertation, and then it's thesis writing and job-searching. In upcoming news: Erika is presenting research from my qualifying experiment at the ASA in the beginning of November.
Aaron Walker and Yi-Hsien Liu got married!
Introducing our new first year cohort!
"My name is Alfredo Garcia Pardo. I received my B.A. in English Philology at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, and an M.A in Spanish at the same university. My thesis title (translated) was "Auxiliary Selection in Complex Tenses. A formal analysis of Old Spanish". Also, I have an M.A. in Teaching Spanish as a Second Language from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid. I have taught Spanish during the summer for a couple of years at an NGO in my hometown. Academically, my main interest so far has been syntax and the lexicon-syntax interface. I speak Spanish (native), English (fluent) and French (intermediate).
In my free time, I like watching classic movies and reading novels and poetry. I love ballet and the opera, but due to my tight budget I barely have a chance to see it live. I am also interested, as a hobby, in philosophy (mostly Nietzche) and gender studies."
"My name is Ulrike Steindl, my nickname that everybody uses (also back home) is Ulli, only my family calls me Ulrike, I'm 26. I am from Austria. My hometown is actually a tiny place called Langenlois which is about an hour's drive from Vienna, but I've been living in Vienna since 2003. I did my MAs at the University of Vienna in linguistics and Chinese studies, where I graduated in 2010. The title of my thesis was "Grammatical Issues in the Chinese Classifier System: The Case of Classifier Reduplication" In the last half year, I worked in a historical linguistics project about Tocharian (check out their not-yet webdesigned, not-yet very functional homepage at www.univie.ac.at/tocharian - the project is conceived to run for another 5 1/2 years, so it need not be perfect yet). Because I'm not that passionate about historical linguistics, but more passionate about syntax and semantics, I chose to come to USC. My native language is Austrian German, which is of course very similar to German German, but is a little different for example in onset aspiration patterns on the phonological side, and has some other funny properties like articles with proper names and wh- copies in wide extraction. I also speak English, Mandarin, and a little French. When I don't do linguistics I knit (it's not as old-fashioned as it sounds), row (unfortunately, I don't think I will have a chance to do that in LA any time soon), go to restaurants and read."
Welcome to USC guys!
07 June 2011
Summer announcements!
- Congratulations to the fellowship recipients: Heeju Hwang, Yi-Hsien Liu, and Bin Yin for being awarded a USC Graduate School Dissertation Completion Fellowship; To Yu-Chi Huang for being awarded the the Morkovin/Manning Fellowship; to Hector Velasquez for being awarded a Del Amo Foundation Research Award from USC Dornsife College for 2011-2012; to Ben Parrell, Sergio Robles-Puente, Barbara Tomascewicz, Erika Varis, and Hector Velasquez, for receiving a Del Amo Foundation Research Award from USC Dornsife College for Summer 2011; to Katy McKinney-Bock for being awarded a Gold Family Graduate Fellowship from USC Dornsife College for Summer 2011; and to Sarah Ouwayda for being awarded the Middle Eastern Studies Program Summer Language Scholarship for Summer 2011.
- Congratulations to Erika Varis for giving birth to Remington Dean Doggett was born on April 20, 2011 at 6:21am. He weighed 5 lbs 13 oz (he's already at 6 lbs 1oz now!) and was 19 inches long.
Summer talks and travel:
Roumyana Pancheva gave an invited talk on "More on Than" on May 27th, in the linguistics colloquium at the University of California in Santa Cruz.
Priyanka Biswas, Mythili Menon, Syed Saurov, and Andrew Simpson are giving talks at FiSAL (Finiteness in South Asian Languages) on June 9-10, 2011, Tromsø, Norway:
- "Participial clauses in Bangla: an alternative account" Priyanka Biswas
- "Revisiting infinitives: the need for tense in Malayalam" Mythili Menon
- "Finiteness, negation, and the directionality of headedness in Bangla" Andrew Simpson and Saurov Syed
19 May 2011
Parallel Domains: Workshop in Honor of Professor Jean-Roger Vergnaud
13 April 2011
Good April News!
Also congratulations to the second year cohort for submitting their first screening papers!
03 March 2011
Spring Travel and Talks
Hagit Borer spent the month of February traveling across South America, besides getting stranded in Buenos Aires, she taught a crash course in Curitiba, and spent a week in Rio de Janeiro. She is now home in Paris for the month before she goes to the Netherlands for three months... She took these pictures in Brazil:
Roumyana Pancheva recently gave an invited talk on "Comparative Illusions" in March in the linguistics seminar/cognitive science series at the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign. She also gave an invited talk at the Cornell Linguistics Colloquium.
Sarah Ouwayda is spending the semester as a visiting student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In April, she is giving a talk entitled "Cardinals Without Plurality" in the LFRG meeting at MIT, and a talk entitled "Agreement, Plurality, and the Structure of the DP" at Ling-Lunch at MIT.
15 February 2011
Visiting Scholar: Sofiana Chiriacescu
We have a visiting scholar, Sofiana Chiriacescu, from the University of Stuttgart, Germany spending the Spring Semester 2011 at our department, working on an experiment in the language processing lab coordinated by Elsi Kaiser.
Sofiana is a Ph.D. Fellow and a researcher at the University of Stuttgart. Her main research interests are in semantics, pragmatics and psycholinguistics. She currently investigates the discourse structuring potential of indefinite noun phrases in Romanian, German and English. Sofiana graduated with an M.A. in German and English Linguistics and Literature from the University of Stuttgart in 2007 and a Diploma in German, English and Sociology form the University “Lucian Blaga”, Sibiu, Romania in 2003.
When not working, the things Sofiana enjoys most are outdoor activities (skiing, hiking, biking, playing tennis, gardening), spending time with her friends and family and cooking.