Human edited web directory based on the DMOZ data. To find out more about this project please use the top main menu.
Subcategories 8
Sites 47
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- Robin Cooper Göteborg University - Computational linguist interested in situation semantics and Montague grammars.
- Barbara Abbott Michigan State University - Interested in semantics and pragmatics of language. Holds a joint appointment in linguistics and philosophy.
- James Copeland Rice University-Professor of linguistics.
- Petra Hendriks Home page of Petra Hendriks, professor at the Center for Language and Cognition at the University of Groningen.
- Martin Stokhof University of Amsterdam - Collection of his papers, including his survey article `Questions' (written in collaboration with Jeroen Groenendijk), which appeared in the `Handbook of Logic and Language' (1997).
- Ghil`ad Zuckerman Academic website of Dr Ghil`ad Zuckermann, D.Phil. (Oxford), a linguist at the University of Cambridge, whose interests include linguistics, Israel, Hebrew, Yiddish, Chinese, Japanese, Turkish and word games.
- Joaquim Llisterri Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. Research and teaching in general and applied phonetics, general and applied linguistics, speech technologies and spoken language resources.
- William Labov University of Pennsylvania - Change in language and dialect, sociolinguistics. Principal investigator of the Phonological Atlas of North America, a massive survey of phonetic variation across the USA.
- Greg Kochanski Research results and papers in computational phonetics.
- Heidi Harley University of Arizona - Interest are syntax, lexical semantics and morphology.
- Sharon Peperkamp University of Paris 8. Research interests include phonological theory and early language acquisition.
- Joseph Greenberg Wikipedia biography emphasizing his work on classifying the languages of Africa and the Americas.
- James Pustejovsky Brandeis University - Interests are computational linguistics, lexical semantics and language guided web analysis. Proposer of The Generative Lexicon, a very influential approach to lexical semantics.
- Jerry A. Fodor Entry at the Dictionary of the Philosophy of Mind.
- Irene Heim Semanticist and head of the linguistics department at MIT. Includes research interests, contact information, and a list of recent publications.
- Mark Baker Syntactician at Rutgers University. His research focuses on syntactic theory, morphology and the grammar of Amerindian languages.
- Alexander Grosu Professor emeritus in the department of linguistics at Tel Aviv University, who initially specialized in theoretical syntax, and has more recently developed a primary interest in issues at the syntax-semantic interface.
- Peter W. Jusczyk Infant language perception, first language acquisition, phonology and prosody.
- Richard Kayne Syntactician at New York University. Includes research interests, CV, contact information and recent papers.
- Michael Kenstowicz Phonologist and language acquisitionist at MIT. One of the early proponents of constraint-based phonology.
- Shigeru Miyagawa Syntactician at MIT. Prominent in Japanese and Altaic linguistics, as well as syntactic subject positions.
- Donca Steriade Phonologist at MIT. Specialized in Greek and Latin, as well as prosody.
- Samuel Jay Keyser Phonologist at MIT. Works on prosody.
- Kenneth L. Hale Provides information on the work of the late linguist Ken Hale, syntactician and field linguist. Studies a great variety of previously unstudied languages.
- Fred Landman Professor of Semantics in the Linguistics Department at Tel Aviv University. He has published on many topics in semantic theory. Currently, he teaches semantics and computational linguistics.
- Elisabeth Selkirk Phonologist at University of Massachusetts at Amherst. Prominent with work on prosody.
- Angelika Kratzer Semanticist at University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
- Joe Pater Phonologist and language acquisitionist at University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
- Arto Anttila Phonology and language variation, Stanford University.
- Paul Kiparsky Phonologist at Stanford University. Proposed many of the recent leading phonological theories.
- Beth Levin Lexical semantics and syntax, Stanford University.
- Joseph Clancy Clements Sociolinguistics, morphology and Spanish and Portuguese linguistics, Indiana University.
- Bruce Hayes Phonologist at UCLA. Author of several books and articles, most famously: "Hayes 1995. Metrical Stress Theory: Principles and Case Studies."
- Alan Prince Phonologist at Rutgers University. Includes research interests, CV, and downloadable papers.
- Jan van Eijck CWI, Amsterdam - Computational linguist, whose site includes details of Dynamo, an implementation of dynamic logic programming.
- Rick Nouwen University of Utrecht - Interested in dynamic semantics, generalized quantifiers theory, plurals, reflexives, reciprocals, NP-typology, and mereology.
- Barbara H. Partee University of Massachusetts at Amherst - A distinguished early worker on Montague Grammar, the main line of her work lies in foundational aspects of semantics and its relationship to syntax.
- John Ohala Experimental phonology and phonetics, University of California, Berkeley.
- Charles Fillmore Syntax and semantics, University of California, Berkeley.
- Larry Hyman Phonology and African languages, University of California, Berkeley.
- Sharon Inkelas Phonologist at University of California at Berkeley.
- Öner Özçelik Phonology, second language acquisition and Turkish/Turkic linguistics, Indiana University.
- Irene Vogel Professor of phonology at University of Delaware. Research interests include phonology, phonetics, prosody.
- Manfred Krifka Professor in general linguistics at the Institute for German Speech and Linguistics, Humboldt University in Berlin. Interested in semantics and interrogatives.
- Kathleen Bardovi-Harlig Second language acquisition, Indiana University.
- Rex A. Sprouse Second language acquisition and Germanic linguistics, Indiana University.
- Laurent Dekydtspotter Second language acquisition and French linguistics, Indiana University. Prominent with work on acquisition of semantics.