Mayfest 2025
Constraints on meaning.
Now in "Frontiers in Psychology" from 2016 alum Juliana Gerard, "Similarity-based interference and the acquisition of adjunct control," co-authored with Jeffrey Lidz and two collaborators at the Utrecht Institute of Linguistics.
New leadership appointments for the 2017-18 academic year.
Tyler Knowlton presents his work at the Cognitive Development Society: "Sentences, Centers, and Sets: Set Selection and the Meanings of More and Most."
Georgetown hosts MACSIM, with a talk by Laurel Perkins and posters by Anouk Dieuleveut, Tyler Knowlton, and the group of Annemarie van Dooren, Gesoel Mendes and Nick Huang.
Now in Language Learning & Development from Adam Liter, "The Interpretation of Plural Morphology and (Non-)Obligatory Number Marking: an Argument from Artificial Language Learning, co-authored with 2017 alum Chris Heffner and former teacher at MSU.
Laurel Perkins present "Perceiving transitivity: Consequences for verb learning" at a Rutgers workshop on Word Learning and Linguistic Theory, reporting her work with Jeffrey Lidz, Naomi Feldman and Alexander Williams.
Skål to 12 Maryland language scientists, who ran the 207 miles of the Ragnar Relay, in 31 hours, 10 minutes and 38 seconds, finishing 23rd overall out of more than 230 squads!
Laurel Perkins presents "Learning to Filter Non-Basic Clauses for Argument Structure Acquisition" at MIT's Workshop on Simplicity and Grammar Learning.
Now out, a special issue of "Phonology" on "Computational phonology today," edited by Bill Idsardi and Stony Brook's Jeff Heinz.
Say hello to our three international visitors: Daisuke Hirai from Kindai University (Japan), Masataka Yano from Tohoku University (Japan), and Sergio López Sancio from the University of the Basque Country (Spain).