Kenneth Pugh receives award from NIH
The MERIT award will support Kenneth’s research on reading and reading disabilities for five to ten years.
The MERIT award will support Kenneth’s research on reading and reading disabilities for five to ten years.
The article investigates the articulation of devoiced /u/ in Japanese.
Graduate students from Stony Brook University, NYU, and CUNY came to Yale University’s main campus in New Haven, Connecticut.
The 2017 Stony Brook–Yale–NYU–CUNY conference will be held at Yale’s Dunham Laboratory.
Jim Wood, Matt Barros, and Matt Tyler presented two talks and a poster.
Scholars from a wide range of institutions and disciplines came to Yale to discuss the cognitive foundations of variation and change in meaning.
The statement responds to an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission complaint filed against the University of Rochester.
Claire spoke about how she applies methods from computational phylogenetics to study the history of the Pama-Nyungan languages.
Jim presented an analysis of extended benefactives, part of the Yale Grammatical Diversity Project’s ongoing research on morphosyntactic microvariation.
Raffaella spoke about joint work with Jim Wood on the syntactic structure of presentatives.