NEW GRADUATE STUDENTS

We welcome nine new graduate students to the department this year.

Ben Mericli comes to UCSC Linguistics from Washington, D.C., where lived and worked for five years after college. Ben studied linguistics, philosophy, and engineering physics at the University of Pittsburgh. He plans to concentrate on morphology and syntax at UCSC and, although his D.C.-based band has been disbanded, hopes to continue to write and play music as linguistics permits.

Chelsea Miller is entering her first year as an MA student but has been on the campus for 4 years having completed her BA in Linguistics here at UCSC in 2014; she looks forward to continuing to study linguistics here. With regard to linguistic research, her interests include syntax and psycholinguistics, and more specifically within these areas, ellipsis, ellipsis resolution, parsing, and memory. In her “free time”, she is probably still thinking about linguistics, but also enjoys taking dance classes, cooking, walking, hiking, and biking (though it’s a must stop to pet all cats on the way).

Hitomi Hirayama comes from Japan, and completed her BA and MA at the University of Tokyo. She is interested in the semantics of noun phrases, information structure, and also in the Romance languages. She is seriously missing udon noodles in Japan, but is nevertheless enjoying her new life in California with two cute cats.

Jed Guevara got his BA in Linguistics and French from UC Berkeley back in 2010. He then went to CSU Long Beach to get his MA in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages. He did a brief stint as an ESL teacher in Long Beach but decided to go back to school. He plans to focus on the acquisition and processing of syntactic dependencies in Tagalog and other Philippine languages. When he is not doing linguistics, he enjoys cooking with wine (and adding some to the food as well), and/or playing boardgames.

Jeff Adler is from New Jersey. He did his undergrad degree at Rutgers, and then lived in Colombia for a year. Intellectually, he swings p-side, and is interested mostly in everything phonological theory (especially OT), with additional interests in phonetics and syntax. Outside of linguistics, he likes hiking and other endeavors into nature, as well as reading and buying new clothes.

Margaret Kroll found linguistics relatively late, after a (short) career working in politics. She was for the past two years in the linguistics PhD program at UCLA, but is very happy to have moved to Santa Cruz. Her linguistic interests are in pragmatics, semantics, and philosophy of language, in particular issues at the semantics/pragmatics interface. Her non-linguistic interests include running, politics, and, at the moment, teaching herself to sew.

Maxwell Sowell is originally from San Diego, and received his BA in Linguistics and Philosophy at UC Davis. He enjoys working with semantics, pragmatics, and philosophy of language. In his free time he likes to drum (let’s jam or start a band!) and drag his friends out to be social. Long road trips are rad.

Nate Clair is a Utah native, whose two loves in life are languages and the outdoors. Nate did his undergrad work at the University of Utah where he studied Linguistics and Middle East studies. He loves Indo-Iranian languages in particular and focuses his research on their syntax and semantics. When not employed in linguistic matters, he is an avid runner, hiker and cross-country skier.

Steven Foley comes to Santa Cruz by way of New York City, so he’s thrilled to experience genuine nature but misses good bagels. Morphosyntax, ergativity, and Caucasian languages are major interests of his, as are cooking and at least moderately artsy movies.

SAMKO’S YEAR IN BERLIN

Also (re-)joining the department this year is Bern Samko who has spent the last twelve months on a research fellowship at the University of Potsdam in Germany. Bern sent in this report of her year:

I’ve just returned to Santa Cruz from the University of Potsdam, where I spent a year as a visiting PhD student in the Integrated Graduate School associated with the Collaborative Research Center Information Structure: The Linguistic Means of Structuring Utterances, Sentences and Texts. The project group I worked with, The Syntactic Expression of Information Structure and the Architecture of Grammar, was led by Gisbert Fanselow and former LRC Research Associate Luis Vicente. Two internal workshops and a PhD day gave me the opportunity to meet, interact with, and get feedback from students and faculty working on information structure at the University of Potsdam, the Humboldt University of Berlin, and the Free University of Berlin. I had a great time living in Berlin, learned a lot, and am looking forward to making the most of that knowledge this year in Santa Cruz!

VISITING GRADUATE STUDENTS

We are also fortunate enough to host two visiting graduate students this year.

Annemarie van Dooren is a visiting scholar from Utrecht, the Netherlands, where she completed her MA thesis on the syntax of modal verbs.  Here in Santa Cruz, she will be working on the semantics of the same topic.

Kristen Greer is a visiting PhD candidate at UC Davis who is preparing to graduate in December 2014. She will be visiting UCSC throughout the year, primarily at department colloquia and workshops. Her research focuses on the syntax, semantics, and pragmatics of quantification in the DP. When not working, she loves to read, bake, and knit. She also loves yoga and practices as often as she can.

SUMMER ADVENTURES

Nate Arnett travelled to AMLaP XX, the 20th annual Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing conference at The Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh in Edinburgh, Scotland. Nate delivered a poster Case and finiteness versus clausal position in subject-verb attachment, presenting research that grew out of his dissertation research and collaborative work with Matt Wagers. The poster presented the results of a series of experiments and computational simulations. In addition to the many excellent talks and posters on bleeding-edge Psycholinguistics research, Nate caught up with other members of the UCSC Linguistics community, including alumni Matt TuckerAdam MorganShayne Slogget, as well as former speakers, friends, and colleagues too numerous to list (you know who you are). Along the way, Nate participated in a workshop on the role of (working) memory in sentence processing, generously hosted by the Maryland Language Science Center at
Kiplin Hall in the north of England. (The connections between Kiplin and (U)MD are interesting, and are well worth a look.)

Nick Kalivoda presented joint work with Erik Zyman at a September meeting of the University of Gothenburg’s Grammar Seminar (Grammatikseminariet). The talk was entitled On the Derivation of Relative Clauses in Teotitlán del Valle Zapotec.

September saw the nineteenth meeting of Sinn und Bedeutung, which was held at the Georg August University in Göttingen, the German town where Frege lived from 1871 to 1873. Among the presenters there were Karen Duek, who reported on joint work with Adrian Brasoveanu (The polysemy of container pseudo-partitives), and Erik Zyman, who presented On the semantics of P’urhepecha degree constructions. The complete program may be viewed here. Participants enjoyed the great variety of semantics and pragmatics talks they had to choose from and the conference’s vibrant international atmosphere.

Jim McCloskey stopped off at MIT on his way back from Ireland to California for a three-day visit, in the course of which he gave a colloquium and met with faculty and graduate students.

Clara Sherley-Appel gave an invited talk at the Linguistics Department of Stony Brook University on September 10th as part of their Brown Bag series. Her talk centered on her ongoing work on the analysis of Turkish relative clauses and the abstract is available here.

MOVING ON

Peter Fabian will enter the Master’s Program in Education at Stanford University starting at the end of June, 2014.

Brianna Kaufman will be traveling around the US, Mexico, and Chile, and then will be entering the Peace Corps.

Rachel Hart will enter the Master’s Program in Speech Pathology at CSU East Bay in Fall 2014.

Michelle Laszlo-Rath is going to the Master’s program in Speech Pathology at the University of Memphis.

Alice Nicholls, who graduated in 2011, will be starting a program in Speech and Language Pathology at CSU East Bay in the fall.

Arianna Puopolo will enter the Master’s Program in Education at the University of California, Berkeley.

Lindsay Ress is moving on to the Master’s program in Speech Pathology at San Jose State University.

Saskia Salm will enter the Master’s Program in Social Work at the University of Southern California.

Jennifer Scott will start the Master’s Program in Applied Linguistics at Boston University in January 2015.

Devin Tankersley will enter the MA program in Linguistics at Tsing Hua University in Taiwan, having won a competitive scholarship from the Taiwanese Ministry of Education for the program.

Mallory Turnbull will begin the Master’s program in Speech Pathology at San Jose State University in the coming Fall.

Nicholas Winter will be entering the PhD program in Linguistics at Rutgers in the coming Fall semester.

Congratulations and good luck to all.

ENDLESS SUMMER

Nick Kalivoda will be traveling to Oaxaca to conduct fieldwork on Teotitlán del Valle Zapotec. Nick’s work will focus on the language’s agreement system, and on a continuing investigation of relative clause structure and binding non-connectivity—part of an ongoing project with Erik Zyman.

Bern Samko will travel to Leuven/Louvain in Flanders (Belgium) on June 13th to give an invited presentation to the FEST group at the University of Leuven on her ongoing research on syntax and information structure in English.

Erik Zyman will be traveling to Janitzio, an island on Lake Pátzcuaro in the state of Michoacán in central-western Mexico, to continue his work on P’urhepecha. He will be investigating the clause structure of this language, and specifically the syntax of the verb phrase.

Amy Rose Deal will travel to Israel in July for the workshop Allomorphy: its logic and limitations, at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Also expected to be in attendance are alums Ruth Kramer and Peter Svenonius. Amy Rose’s paper for the conference deals with certain interesting patterns of plural marking and double reduplication in Nez Perce.

Grant McGuire will be presenting at the upcoming LabPhon 14 conference at the NINJAL Institute in Tachikawa, Japan on July 24-27th. The oral presentation program is here. Grant’s talk is titled Stereotypes predict memory effects for voices. Junko Ito and Armin Mester will also be at the conference.

Jaye Padgett will be in Ireland for the last two weeks of June to do more ultrasound fieldwork in Conamara, together with collaborator Máire Ní Chiosáin of University College Dublin. Also involved in this ongoing project are Grant McGuire and alumnus Ryan Bennett of Yale.

Maziar Toosarvandani will be devoting the summer to some intense fieldwork on Northern Paiute with the Mono Lake community near Bridgeport in eastern California.

Matt Wagers and Sandy Chung will return twice to the islands of Saipan and Rota in the Northern Mariana Islands to continue their psycholinguistic work on Chamorro. They will collect new data on relative clause comprehension in June, and relative clause production in September. Back in Santa Cruz, the Digital Chamorro Group will be working hard: Scarlett Clothier-Goldschmidt, the 2013-2014 NSF REU fellow, will continue her corpus-based research on person-animacy constraints in Chamorro, while Karl DeVries, the NSF Graduate Research Associate, will resume his work on building digital tools for using the Chamorro dictionary database.

FIEDLER DEFENSE

The final PhD defense of the season took place when Judith Fiedler successfully defended her dissertation on Germanic It-Clefts on Tuesday afternoon June 3rd. The committee consisted of Donka Farkas and Jim McCloskey as co-chairs along with Jorge Hankamer as third member.

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