Rutgers at SCiL
Rutgers will be well-represented at the 2020 meeting for the Society for Computation in Linguistics (co-located with LSA)! All three poster presentations will be given on Thursday, Jan. 2nd from … Read More
Rutgers will be well-represented at the 2020 meeting for the Society for Computation in Linguistics (co-located with LSA)! All three poster presentations will be given on Thursday, Jan. 2nd from … Read More
Your name: Adam McCollum Info about the language(s) you did fieldwork on: Most of my fieldwork has been on Kazakh, with less on Kyrgyz, Uzbek, and Uyghur. I’ve also done … Read More
On Nov. 16th, Rutgers hosted the 2019 meeting of the Northeast Computational Phonology Circle [NECPhon]! Many of our own linguists presented their work– their talks are listed below: Wenyue Hua, … Read More
Earlier this month, Prof. Akinbiyi Akinlabi was invited to speak at Leiden University in The Netherlands! His talk, titled “The Phonology and Syntax of Tone Spreading in … Read More
Kristen Syrett (who we also just found out will be receiving the LSA’s Linguistic Service Award in January) was recently interviewed for an episode of a speech and language podcast … Read More
Our very own Mariapaola D’Imperio has been invited to speak at the first meeting of Sensus (a workshop on the formal semantics and pragmatics of Romance languages)! The workshop will … Read More
This past weekend, Meg Gotowski and Kristen Syrett gave a talk at the 44th Boston University Conference on Language Development (BUCLD)! Their talk was titled, “Investigating the Hypothesis … Read More
4th year graduate student Chris Oaken recently recently represented Rutgers Linguistics at the 50th annual meeting of the North East Linguistic Society [NELS]! He and Jane Chandlee presented a poster … Read More
On November 14th and 15th, the Rutgers Department of Anthropology will be holding the Rutgers Indigenous Languages Colloquium as part of their speaker series in honor of the UN’s year of … Read More
In the spirit of the season, we thought it would be fun to do a little digging into the history of our department (and a big thank-you to the … Read More