Theme: Language, Mind, and Culture
Sponsored
by
The Linguistic Society of America
&
Dept. of Linguistics & Germanic, Slavic, Asian & African Languages,
Michigan State University
Nearly 90 courses in all areas of linguistics will be offered at the 2003 Institute. Seven introductory courses will run the entire 6 weeks; all others will be offered in 3-week blocks: 30 June - 18 July or 21 July - 8 August. There are both introductory and advanced courses in the 3-week sessions, and all courses are open to graduate and undergraduate students as well as Institute Affiliates (nonstudents).
For complete, up-to-date information, including course, conference, and workshop schedules, visit the Institute website: http://lsa2003.lin.msu.edu. All registration information and forms will be available on the website in November 2002. A printed brochure will be distributed to departments of linguistics in early December, and individual copies can be requested by emailing the Institute (lsa2003@msu.edu) or writing to: LSA 2003, A-740 Wells Hl, MI SU, East Lansing, MI 48824-1027.
The Institute program includes lectures by:
Edward Sapir Professor: Ray Jackendoff
Hermann & Klara Collitz Professor: John Rickford
Forum lecturers: Janet Dean Fodor, Jane Hill, William Labov, & Michael Tanenhaus
The Faculty and their courses:
Steven Abney & Gosse Bouma - Intro to Computational Linguistics
Dorit Abusch - Semantics of Tense
Helen Aristar-Dry - Narrative
Nicholas Asher - Discourse Representation Theory
William Badecker & Robert Frank - Intro to Cognitive Science
Mark Baker - Polysynthesis
Ellen Barton - Discourse in Institutions & Professions
Patrice Beddor - Intro to Acoustic & Perceptual Phonetics
Alan Beretta & Maria Piñango - Neurolinguistics
Douglas Biber & Randi Reppen - Corpus Linguistics
Zeljko Boskovic & Howard Lasnik - Intro to Syntax
Mary Bucholtz - Language & Gender
Luigi Burzio - Morphophonology
Carol Chapelle - Computer-Assisted Language Learning
Harald Clahsen - The Mental Lexicon
Herbert Clark - Discourse & Interaction
Nick Clements - Feature Theory
Haruko Cook - Japanese Discourse
Stephen Crain - Acquisition of Semantics
Peter Culicover - Advanced Topics in English Syntax
San Duanmu - Chinese Phonology
David Dwyer - Language & Culture
Mutsuko Endo-Hudson - Readings in Japanese Language Teaching
Fernanda Ferreira - Topics in Language Processing
Carmen Fought - Sociolinguistics of US Latinos & Latinas
Danny Fox - Syntax-Semantics Interface
John Goldsmith - Topics in Computational Morphology & Phonology
Jeanette Gundel & Massimo Poesio - Computational Approaches to Reference
Gregory Guy - Variation in Phonology
Bruce Hayes - Acquisition and Learnability in Phonology
Alison Henry - Variation in Morphosyntax
Laurence R. Horn - Lexical Pragmatics
Norbert Hornstein - Minimalism
James Huang - Chinese Syntax
Elizabeth Hume-O'Haire - Intro to Phonology
Ray Jackendoff - Cognitive Foundations of Language
Pauline Jacobson - Direct Compositionality & Variable-free Semantics
Richard Janda & Brian Joseph - Intro to Historical Linguistics
Hans Kamp - Topics in Semantics
Chuanren Ke - Chinese Language Teaching
Judy Kegl - Sign Acquisition
Anthony Kroch - Language Change
William A. Ladusaw - Intro to Semantics
Usha Lakshmanan - UG & SLA
Chungmin Lee - Korean Semantics
Patsy Lightbown & Nina Spada - Instructed SLA
Yen-Hwei Lin - Intro to Optimality Theory
Sally McConnell-Ginet & Gregory Ward - Language & Sexuality
Ian Maddieson & Richard Wright - Auditory & Perceptual Phonetics
Alec Marantz - Morphology
Miriam Meyerhoff - Language & Identity
Lesley Milroy - Intro to Sociolinguistics
Alan Munn - Coordination: Symmetries & Asymmetries
Carol Myers-Scotton - Contact Linguistics
Nancy Niedzielski - Sociophonetics
Shigeko Okamoto - Japanese Sociolinguistics
Jaye Padgett - Topics in Optimality Theory
Ana Teresa Pérez-Leroux - Acquisition of Tense & Aspect
David Pesetsky - Advanced Topics in Syntax
Charlene Polio - Writing in a Second Language
Ellen Prince - Discourse & Syntax
Douglas Pulleyblank - Markedness in Phonology
John Rickford - Historical Backgrounds of African American English
Tom Roeper - Acquisition of Syntax
Douglas Saddy - Language Neuroimaging II
Ivan Sag & Gert Webelhuth - HPSG
Mamoru Saito - Japanese Syntax
Natalie Schilling-Estes - Language & Community
Cristina Schmitt - Syntactic Investigations into Aspect T.
Daniel Seely - Syntax of English
Antonella Sorace - Intro to SLA
Donca Steriade - Phonetics in Phonology
Ida Stockman - Assessment of Nonnative & Minority Dialect Speakers
Tim Stowell - The Syntax of Tense
Verna Stutzman - Lexicography & Semantic Tools
Elaine Tarone - Interlanguage Variation
Denise Troutman - African American Women's Language
Peter Trudgill - Historical Sociolinguistics
Michael Ullman - Language Neuroimaging I
Timothy J. Vance - Japanese Phonology
Jacqueline van Kampen - Intro to First Language Acquisition
Ken Wexler - Specific Language Impairment
John B. Whitman & James Hye Suk Yoon - Korean Syntax
Edwin Williams - Topics in Morphology
Young-mee Yu Cho - Korean Phonology
Eric Zee - Chinese Phonetics
Concurrent meetings and workshops:
• audio & video technology
• Chinese linguistics
• functional linguistics
• Japanese & Korean linguistics
• Japanese language processing
• language & gender
• minorities in careers in linguistics
• pragmatics
• semantics
• syntax
• first language acquisition
Cosponsors:
Association for Computational Linguistics
College of Arts & Letters, Michigan State University
College of Literature, Science & the Arts, The University of Michigan
Office of the Provost, Michigan State University
Office of the Vice President for Research & Graduate Studies, Michigan State
University
Supporters:
American Dialect Society
Center for Language Education & Research, Michigan State University
Cognitive Science Program, Michigan State University
Department of Anthropology, Michigan State University
English Language Center, Michigan State University
International Studies & Programs, Michigan State University
Julian Samora Research Institute, Michigan State University
The Korea Foundation
Language Learning Center, Michigan State University
Summer Institute of Linguistics