KU Linguistics
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The official account of the Linguistics Department at the University of Kansas. ɹɑk̚ ʧʰɔk̚ ʤeɪhɔk̚ <!> https://linguistics.ku.edu/
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🎉 Congratulations to Corey McCulloch, who defended his PhD thesis, "Stressing the Suprasegmentals: L2 phonetic training of Spanish stress" last Thursday. He is pictured here with committee members Allard Jongman (advisor), Joan Sereno (via Zoom), Amy Rossomondo, Jeff Holliday, and Jie Zhang 🎉🌻
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
Please join us in Stauffer-Flint Hall room 100, or contact [email protected] for a Zoom link.
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
Tomorrow (10/2) at 4:00 pm we are welcoming Dr. Katie Hoemann from the KU Department of Psychology as she gives a colloquy talk entitled, "Around the world and in every day: The contexts that structure our understanding and experience of emotion". The event is open to the public 🌻
Flyer for talk, featuring text and a headshot of Dr. Hoemann.

Thursday, October 2
Stauffer-Flint Hall room 100
4:00 pm Central Daylight Time
Zoom link available upon request to: linguistics@ku.edu

Title: "Around the world and in every day: The contexts that structure our understanding and experience of emotion"

Abstract: Experiences of emotion are multidimensional and fundamentally situated. They involve features such as bodily sensations, mental contents, and associated behaviors, and unfold in connection with personal motivations, social relationships, and physical surroundings. Natural language provides a window onto how people represent these experiences by capturing the nature of the events being described, the aspects that are emphasized, and the goals, beliefs, and norms that shape them. In this talk, I describe recent work that has used natural language to examine situational, individual, and cultural differences in emotion. These studies apply both qualitative and quantitative approaches, and include interviews with Hadza hunter-gatherers, daily diaries of American university students, and in-the-moment verbal recordings from Belgian community members. Together, their findings paint a picture of rich variation in the experience and understanding of emotion that is meaningfully structured by the contexts we find around the world and in our everyday lives.
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
While there, he also ran into Prof. Joan Sereno, who is currently heading the Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences at the National Science Foundation 🌻
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
Grad student Xuan Wang was recently at the 17th annual meeting of the Society for the Neurobiology of Language #SNL2025, where he presented his work w/ Profs. Alison Gabriele and Rob Fiorentino, "Investigating sensitivity to binding constraints in L1 and L2 English using event-related potentials" 👏
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
A reminder: Tomorrow (Thursday 9/11) we welcome linguist and Uyghur language educator Abduweli Ayup as he shows the film "All Static and Noise", a documentary on China's Uyghur detention camps, and discusses his work promoting the Uyghur language. All are welcome to attend @ Hall Center 4:00 pm.
A flyer for the talk, with a photo of Abduweli Ayup. Title: Chinese Linguistic Imperialism & Uyghur Resistance. Documentary and Discussion. Thursday September 11, 2025, 4 pm. Hall Center for the Humanities.
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
On August 28 we were delighted to welcome Dr. Nozomi Tanaka from the University of Iowa, who delivered this year's Oread Lecture in Linguistics! She gave a talk entitled, "Subject preference in relative clauses: A typological and developmental perspective." We really enjoyed her visit! 😊
Dr. Nozomi Tanaka delivering her talk while standing at a computer lectern, next to a projector screen displaying powerpoint slides. The slide reads "Key Assumptions in My Research", and shows a circular diagram with boxes highlighting different components, including "developmental difficulty", "syntactic complexity", "typological generalization", and "processing difficulty".
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
Last weekend, KU linguists (and friends!) visited a local sunflower field, as one does when you are a linguist in Kansas 🌻
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
Next Thursday, the Hall Center for the Humanities will welcome linguist and writer Abduweli Ayup, a specialist in Uyghur language education. He will show the film "All Static and Noise", a documentary on China's Uyghur detention camps, and discuss his work promoting the Uyghur language.
A flyer advertising the lecture. Thursday, September 11, 2025, 4:00 pm. Hall Center for the Humanities Conference Hall. Abduweli Ayup, Chinese Linguistic Empiricism & Uyghur Resistance.
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
Yesterday, Profs. John Gluckman, Utako Minai, and Steve Politzer-Ahles along with grad student Brakson Ping helped welcome new students to KU at the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences's "College Carnival", where they got to talk to new students about why KU is a great place to study linguistics!
A few students and faculty standing around and looking at a table with information and books about linguistics. A few students and faculty standing around and looking at a table with information and books about linguistics.
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
As for next steps, Dr. Nobuki will be moving soon to begin a new position at Bates College! We wish her all the best 🎉🌻
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
A big thanks as well to her other committee members: Profs. Rob Fiorentino, Steve Politzer-Ahles, Alison Gabriele, and (not pictured) Margarethe McDonald from KU SPLH.
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
Congratulations to Dr. Ayumi Nobuki, who successfully defended her dissertation today! Her dissertation was titled "Comprehension of an Implied Meaning in Children: Investigating a Role of Contrastive Particle in the Felicity Judgment of Sentences", and she was advised by Prof. Utako Minai. 🎉
Dr. Ayumi Nobuki standing with her dissertation committee in front of a projector screen from her defense (pictured left to right: Rob Fiorentino, Utako Minai, Ayumi Nobuki, Steve Politzer-Ahles, Alison Gabriele).
Reposted by KU Linguistics
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I didn't know they were getting CELEBRITIES on this show 🤩🤩🤩🇳🇬🇳🇬🇳🇬
dannybate.bsky.social
New ALILI episode!

Episode 35 of ALILI is a step into a new language family: Niger-Congo. Our way into this corner of the linguistic world is Dza, an endangered language spoken in northeastern Nigeria, as introduced by Peace Benson.

Listen on Acast or elsewhere:
shows.acast.com/a-language-i...
Artwork for the podcast A Language I Love Is...
Reposted by KU Linguistics
dannybate.bsky.social
New ALILI episode!

Episode 35 of ALILI is a step into a new language family: Niger-Congo. Our way into this corner of the linguistic world is Dza, an endangered language spoken in northeastern Nigeria, as introduced by Peace Benson.

Listen on Acast or elsewhere:
shows.acast.com/a-language-i...
Artwork for the podcast A Language I Love Is...
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
Current and former KU folks reunited at the 56th Annual Conf on African Linguistics (ACAL), held last weekend at U. of Minnesota! (L to R): Peace Benson, Esther Acheampong, Jamie Hudson (BA '25), Brakson Ping (BA '24), Dr. John Gluckman, Dr. Harold Torrence, Adam An, and Dr. Aron Finholt (PhD '24).
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
In this episode, he discusses his recent paper, ‘Can the mismatch negativity really be elicited by abstract linguistic contrasts?’, co-authored with Dr. Bernard Jap of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University. This paper was recently published as a Registered Report in Neurobiology of Language.
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
Listen to our very own Dr. Steve Politzer-Ahles, who is the featured guest on the latest episode of the Language Neuroscience Podcast! langneurosci.org/podcast/
The Language Neuroscience Podcast
langneurosci.org
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
The talk is open to the public. If you would like to participate remotely, please email [email protected] for a Zoom link.
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
This Thursday, April 3, we will be hosting our inaugural Oread Lecture in Linguistics, featuring Dr. Karthik Durvasula from Michigan State University! His talk is entitled: "Deriving incomplete neutralisation through abstract representations". It will be held at 4:00 pm CDT in DHDC (Dole) 2092 🌻
A flyer advertising the talk

Oread Lecture in Linguistics
Deriving incomplete neutralisation through abstract representations

Abstract: Research over the last few decades has consistently questioned the sufficiency of abstract/discrete phonological representations based on putative misalignments between predictions from such representations and observed experimental results. Here, I'll first suggest that many of the arguments ride on misunderstandings of the original claims from generative phonology, and that the typical evidence furnished is consistent with those claims. I'll then narrow in on the phenomenon of incomplete neutralisation and show again that it is consistent with the classic generative phonology view. I'll further point out that extant accounts of the phenomenon do not achieve important desiderata and typically do not provide an explanation for either the phenomenon itself, or why there are actually at least two different kinds of incomplete neutralisation that don't stem from task confounds. Finally, I present new experimental data and our explanation that the phenomenon is an outcome of planning using abstract/discrete phonological knowledge.

Dr. Karthik Durvasula
Michigan State University

Thursday, April 3
2092 DHDC (Dole)
4:00 pm Central Daylight Time

Zoom link available upon request to: linguistics@ku.edu
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
It is open to the public, and a zoom link for remote participation is available upon request to [email protected].
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
KU Linguistics PhD candidate Ayumi Nobuki will be giving a colloquy this week: "Comprehension of pragmatic meaning in Japanese-speaking children: Investigation of a linguistic factor in the felicity of negation". It will be held this Thursday, March 27 at 4:00 PM in Dole 2092.
A flyer with a photo of the speaker, Ayumi Nobuki. Title: Comprehension of pragmatic meaning in Japanese-speaking children: Investigating a linguistic factor in the felicity of negation. Department of Linguistics, University of Kansas. Thursday, March 27, 4:00 pm Central Daylight Time, 2092 DHDC (Dole). Zoom link available upon request to: linguistics@ku.edu.

Text of abstract: Research to date has argued that negative sentences are more challenging to comprehend than affirmative sentences. However, a number of recent studies revealed that both children and adults are sensitive to the felicity of negative sentences, and they can comprehend the sentences more easily when they are used felicitously in a given context. In the literature of child language acquisition, what factors determine the felicity of negative sentences is under discussion. In my project, I focused on Japanese because it has a morpheme called Contrastive-marking particle wa, which affects the felicity of negative sentences in a particular context. For example, a negative sentence with Contrastive -wa on the object noun, ringo 'apple,' inu-wa ringo-wa motte-nai-yo, means "The dog doesn't have an apple"; however, it also means that "the dog has something other than an apple." Thus, the sentence with Contrastive -wa is more felicitous when a dog has something other than an apple than when it has nothing. On the other hand, without Contrastive -wa, the sentence simply means that the dog doesn't have an apple, and no implied meaning arises. Crucially, empirical data regarding whether/how much Japanese native speakers (especially children) are aware of the contribution of Contrastive -wa to the felicity of negative sentences remained sparse. Therefore, I addressed this issue by testing the comprehension of negative sentences with this particle in Japanese-speaking adults, preschool-age children, and school- age children. [Text truncated due to character limit]
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
The public is welcome to attend, and if you can only make it remotely, email [email protected] for the zoom link. Hope to see you there!
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
He will give a talk on a new syntactic blocking effect in Hindi-Urdu, one that promises to have significant impact on our understanding of how syntactic categories work. The talk is this Friday, March 7, at 3 pm, in Stauffer-Flint Hall room 100.
kansaslinguistics.bsky.social
Join us this Friday for our annual Ingemann Lecture! This annual talk honors our department's founder, Dr. Frances Ingemann, by inviting a leading scholar in linguistics to present their research. This year, we are hosting Dr. Rajesh Bhatt of the University of Massachusetts Amherst.
A flyer with a photo of Dr. Rajesh Bhatt and the following text: Linguistics Colloquy: Ingemann Lecture. A Blocking Effect in Hindi-Urdu. Dr. Rajesh Bhatt. Department of Linguistics, University of Massachusetts. Friday, March 7. 3:00 pm Central Standard Time. 100 Stauffer-Flint Hall. Zoom link available upon request to: linguistics@ku.edu