[Download PDF version]

Curriculum Vitae
June 2008

Address:
Institute for Cognitive Science
594 UCB
University of Colorado
Boulder CO 80309-0594

Mailing Address:
1625 Mariposa Ave.
Boulder, Colorado 80302


Home Office Telephone: 303-444-4274
Fax 303-413-0017
E-mail: lise.menn@colorado.edu

Date of Birth: December 28, 1941
Place of Birt: Philadelphia, Pa.
Citizenship: U.S.A.

A. Publications:

1. Books Published/Distributed

Pattern, control, and contrast in beginning speech: A case study in the development of word form and word function. By L. Menn. Dissertation, University of Illinois, Urbana, 1976. Published, Bloomington: Indiana University Linguistic Club (1979). Pp. 291 (incl. appendix).

Exceptional Language and Linguistics. Ed. by L. K. Obler & L. Menn. New York: Academic Press (1982). Pp. 372.

Handbook for grant proposal preparation. Ed. by A. Peters, L. Menn, P. Chapin, and H. Aguerra. Washington, D.C.: Linguistic Society of America (1986). Pp. 247 (revised version viewable on NSF website).

Agrammatic Aphasia:  A Cross-Language Narrative Sourcebook. Ed. by L. Menn & L. K. Obler. Amsterdam: John Benjamins (1990). 3 vols., pp. 1,985.

Phonological Development: Models, Research, Implications. Ed. by C. A. Ferguson, L. Menn, and C. Stoel-Gammon. Parkton, MD: York Press (1992). Pp. 693.

Non-fluent Aphasia in a Multi-Lingual World.  L.Menn, M.P. O'Connor, L.K.Obler, & Audrey L. Holland. Amsterdam: John Benjamins.  (1995) pp. xvii+212.

Methods for Studying Language Production.   L. Menn & N. B. Ratner  (eds). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum. (2000)  pp.vi + 438.

 

2. Articles Published in refereed journals, books, or proceedings

Phonotactic rules in beginning speech. (By L. Menn.) Lingua  26.225-241 (1971).

On me. (By L. Menn.) Linguistic Inquiry 3.228-233 (1972).

On the origin and growth of phonological and syntactic rules. (By L. Menn.) Papers from the Ninth Regional Meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society,  pp. 378-385 (1973).

A counter-example to fronting as a universal of child language. (By L. Menn.) Journal of Child Language 2.293-297 (1975).

Now you see it, now you don't: Tracing the development of communicative competence. (By L. Menn & S. Haselkorn.) In J. Kegl (ed.), Proceedings of the 7th Annual Meeting of the Northeast Linguistic Society  (1976), pp. 249-260.

On the acquisition of phonology. (By P. Kiparsky & L. Menn.) In John Macnamara (ed.), Language Learning and Thought.  New York: Academic Press (1977), pp. 47-78.  Reprinted in G. Ioup & S. H. Weinberger (eds.), Interlanguage Phonology: The Acquisition of a Second Language Sound System.  Cambridge, MA: Newbury House (1987), pp. 23-52.

Phonological units in beginning speech. (By L. Menn.) In Alan Bell and Joan B. Hooper (eds.), Syllables and Segments.  Amsterdam: North-Holland (1978), pp. 157-172.

Elvish loanwords in Indo-European: Cultural implications. (By L. Menn.)  In J. Allan (ed.), An Introduction to Elvish.  Somerset: Bran's Head Books Ltd. (1978), pp.143-151. [Parody]. Book reprinted 1995.

Perception and production of phonemic contrasts. (By P. Menyuk & L. Menn.) In Paul Fletcher & M. Garman (eds.), Studies in Language Acquisition. Cambridge: University Press (1979), pp. 49-70. Revised as Early strategies for the perception and production of words and sounds. (By P. Menyuk, L. Menn, & R. Silber). In P. Fletcher and M. Garman, (eds.), Language Acquisition,  2nd edition. Cambridge: University Press (1986), pp. 198-222.

Peaks vary, end-points don't: Implications for linguistic theory. (By S. Boyce & L. Menn.) Proceedings of the 6th Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistic Society. Linguistics Dept., University of California, Berkeley (1979), pp. 373-384.

Child phonology and phonological theory. (By L. Menn.) In G. Yeni-Komshian, J. Kavanagh, & C. A. Ferguson (eds.), Child Phonology: Perception and Production, vol. 1. New York:  Academic Press (1980), pp. 23-42.

Exceptional language data as linguistic evidence: An introduction. (By L. Menn & L. K. Obler.) In L. K. Obler & L. Menn (eds.), Exceptional Language and Linguistics. New York: Academic Press (1982), pp. 3-14.

Child language as a source of constraints on linguistic theory.  (By L. Menn.) In L. K. Obler & L. Menn (eds.), Exceptional Language and Linguistics. New York: Academic Press (1982), pp. 247-260.

Fundamental frequency and discourse structure. (By L. Menn & S. Boyce.) Language and Speech  25.341-383 (1982).

Development of articulatory, phonetic, and phonological capabilities. (By L. Menn.) In Brian Butterworth (ed.), Language Production, vol. 2. London: Academic Press (1983), pp. 3-50.

Contrasting cases of Italian agrammatic aphasia without comprehension disorder. (By G. Miceli, A. Mazzucchi, L. Menn, & H. Goodglass.) Brain and Language 19.65-97 (1983).

The repeated morph constraint: towards an explanation. (By L. Menn & B. MacWhinney). Language  60.419-541 (1984).

Phonological development.  (By L. Menn.) In J. Berko Gleason (ed.), Language Development.  Columbus:  Merrill (1985), pp. 61-102. Revised for 2nd edition (1989), pp. 59-100; for 3rd edition, together with Carol Stoel-Gammon (1993), pp. 65-113; for 4th edition (1997), 69-121, for 5th edition, 2000.

Is agrammatism a unitary phenomenon? (By H. Goodglass & L. Menn.) In M.-L. Kean (ed.), Agrammatism. New York: Academic Press (1985), pp. 1-26.

Baby talk as stereotype and register. (By L. Menn & J. Berko Gleason.) In J. A. Fishman et al. (eds.), The Fergusonian Impact,  vol. 1, From Phonology to Society.  Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter (1986), pp. 111-125.

Language acquisition, aphasia, and phonotactic universals. (By L. Menn.) In F. R. Eckman et al. (eds.), Markedness.  New York: Plenum (1986), pp. 241-255.

Lexical retrieval: The tip of the tongue phenomenon. (By S. Kohn, A. Wingfield, L. Menn, H. Goodglass,  J. Berko Gleason, and M.R. Hyde) Applied Psycholinguistics 8.245-266 (1987).

Findings of the Cross-Language Agrammatism Study, Phase I: Agrammatic narrative. (By L. Menn & L. K. Obler.) Aphasiology  2.347-350 (1988).

Agrammatism: The state of the art. (By L. K. Obler & L. Menn.) Journal of Neurolinguistics 3.63-76 (1988).

Some people who don't talk right: Universal and particular in child language, aphasia, and language obsolescence. (By L. Menn.) In Nancy Dorian (ed.), Investigating obsolescence: Studies in language contraction and death. Cambridge: University Press (1989), pp. 335-345.

Comparing approaches to comparative aphasiology. (By L. Menn.)  Aphasiology 3.143-150 (1989).

Chapter l, Introduction. (By L. Menn & L. K. Obler). In Agrammatic Aphasia, vol. I, pp. 3-12 (1990).

Chapter 2, Methodology. (By L. Menn & L. K. Obler.) In Agrammatic Aphasia, vol. I, pp. 13-36 (1990).

Chapter 4, Two cases of agrammatism in English. (By L. Menn.) In Agrammatic Aphasia, vol. I, pp. 117-178 (1990).

Chapter 20, Conclusion: Cross-language data and theories of agrammatism. (By L. Menn & L. K. Obler.) In Agrammatic Aphasia, vol. II, pp. 1369-1389 (1990).

Concreteness: Nouns, verbs, and hemispheres. (By Z. Eviatar, L. Menn, & E. Zaidel.) Cortex  26.611-624. (1990)

Building our own models: Child phonology comes of age. (By L. Menn) In Ferguson, Menn, & Stoel-Gammon (eds.), Phonological Development: Models, Research, Implications, pp. 3-15 (1992).

The "two-lexicon" model of child phonology: Looking back, looking ahead. (By L. Menn and E. Matthei.) In Ferguson, Menn, & Stoel-Gammon (eds.), Phonological Development: Models, Research, Implications, pp. 211-247 (1992).

Connectionist modeling and the microstructure of phonological development. (By L. Menn, K. Markey, M. Mozer, & C. Lewis.) In B. de Boysson-Bardies, S. de Schonen, P. Juszcyk, P. MacNeilage, & J. Morton (eds.), Developmental Neurocognition: Speech and Face Processing in the First Year of Life. Dordrecht: Kluwer (1993), pp. 421-33.

False starts and filler syllables: Ways to learn grammatical morphemes. (By A. M. Peters & L. Menn). Language  69:4 (1993). pp. 742-777.

A linguistic communication measure for aphasic narratives. (L. Menn, G. Ramsberger, & N. Helm-Estabrooks). Aphasiology 8:343-359. (1994).

Phonological development. (1995) By L. Menn & Carol Stoel-Gammon. In Paul Fletcher & B. MacWhinney (eds.), A Handbook of Child Language. Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 335-359.

Cross-linguistic studies of aphasia: Why and how (1996). Overview for Aphasiology Special Issue on Comparative Aphasiology. By L. Menn, Jussi Niemi, & Elisabeth Ahlsèn. Aphasiology 10:6 (523-531).

Evidence Children Use: Learnability and the Acquisition of Morphology. (1997) In Proceedings of the 22nd annual meeting of the Berkeley Linguistic Society.  Berkeley, CA: Linguistics Department.

Menn, L. and A. Peters. (1998) Permeable Modules: On evolving and acquiring language-specific capacities. In A. Aksu-Koc et al, Perspectives on Language Acquisition: Selected Papers from the VIIth Congress for the Study of Child Language. Bogazici University Press, Istanbul.

The interaction of preserved pragmatics and impaired syntax in Japanese and English aphasic speech. By L.Menn, K.F. Reilly, M. Hayashi, A. Kamio, I. Fujita, and S. Sasanuma. Brain and Language, 61: 183-225 (1998).

The role of empathy in sentence production: A functional analysis of aphasic and normal elicited narratives in Japanese and English. (1999) L. Menn, A. Kamio, M. Hayashi, I. Fujita, S. Sasanuma, & L. Boles. In A. Kamio and K. Takami (eds.), Function and Structure.  Amsterdam: John Benjamins. pp.317-355.

Ramsberger, Gail, Akira Miyake, Lise Menn, Kathleen Reilly, and Christopher M. Filley Selective preservation of geographic names and numerical information in a patient with severe aphasia. (1999). Aphasiology 13, 625-645.

Studying the pragmatic microstructure of aphasic and normal speech: An experimental approach. (By L. Menn.) In Menn & Bernstein Ratner (eds.), Methods for Studying Language Production. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum. pp.377-401.(2000)

Ratner, Nan Bernstein & Lise Menn. 2000. In the beginning was the wug: Forty years of language elicitation studies. In Menn & Bern.stein Ratner (eds.), Methods for Studying Language Production. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.pp. 1-23.

It's time to face a simple question: What makes canonical form simple? Brain and Language 71, 157-159. Menn, L. 2000.

Obenchain, Patrick, Lise Menn, and Christine Yoshinaga-Itano. 2000. Can speech development at thirty-six months in children with hearing loss be predicted from information available in the second year of life? In  C. Yoshinaga-Itano and A. Sedey (eds.) Language, Speech, and Social-Emotional Development of Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing Children: The Early Years. Volta Review Research Monograph.

Wallace, Valerie, Lise Menn, and Christine Yoshinaga-Itano. 2000. Is babble the gateway to speech for all children? A longitudinal study of deaf and hard-of-hearing infants. In  C. Yoshinaga-Itano and A. Sedey (eds.) Language, Speech, and Social-Emotional Development of Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing Children: The Early Years.Volta Review Research Monograph.

Ramsberger, Gail & Lise Menn. Co-Constructing Lucy: Adding a Social Perspective to the Assessment of Communicative Success in Aphasia . In C. Goodwin (ed.) Conversation and Language Impairment.  New York: Oxford University Press. 2003.

Feldman, Andrea, & Lise Menn. 2003. Up close and personal: the development of filler syllables. Journal of Child Language, 30:4, 735-768.

Saving the Baby: Making sure that old data survive new theories. 2004. In René Kager, Joe Pater, & Wim Zonneveld (eds.), Fixing Priorities: Constraints in Phonological Acquisition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 54-72.

Encoding location in aphasic and normal speech: The interaction of pragmatics with language output processing limitations. 2005. Menn, L., M. Gottfried, A.L. Holland, & M.F. Garrett. Aphasiology 19, 487-519.

Primary Progressive Aphasia in a Bilingual Woman. 2006. Christopher M. Filley, Gail Ramsberger, Lise Menn, Jiang Wu, Bessie Y. Reid, & Allen L. Reid. Neurocase 12:296-299.

 

SUBMITTED, under review:

Menn, Lise, Ellen Schmidt & Brent Nicholas. Conspiracy and Sabotage in the Acquisition of Phonology: Dense Data Undermine Existing Theories, Provide Scaffolding for a New One. For M. Kenstowicz (Ed.), festschrift for C. W. Kisseberth.

 

 

 

3. Articles published, occasional/working papers and other conference proceedings.

A note on the acquisition of affricates and fricatives. (By L. Menn.) Stanford Papers and Reports on Child Language Development  6.87-96 (1973).

Assertions not made by the main clause of a sentence. (By L. Menn.) Studies in the Linguistic Sciences (University of Illinois) 4:1.132-143 (1974).

Psychological reality, linguistic theory, and the internal structure of the lexicon. (By R. Wilbur & L. Menn.) San Jose State Occasional Papers in Linguistics,  pp. 212-221 (1975).

Evidence for an interactionist-discovery theory of child phonology. (By L. Menn.) Stanford Papers and Reports on Child Language Development 12:169-177, (1976).

An autosegmental approach to child phonology: First pass. (By L. Menn.) In G. N. Clements (ed.), Harvard Studies in Phonology,  vol. 1. Cambridge, MA.: Harvard University Linguistics Department (1977), pp. 315-334.

Transition and variation in child phonology: Modeling a developing system. (By L. Menn.) Proceedings of the Ninth International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, Vol. II. Copenhagen  (1979), pp. 169-175.

Towards a psychology of phonology:  Child phonology as a first step. (By L. Menn.)  In Robert Herbert (ed)., Proceedings of the 3rd Annual Michigan Conference on Metatheory. East Lansing: Michigan State University Linguistics Department (1979), pp. 138-179.

Theories of phonological development. (By L. Menn.) In H. Winitz (ed.), Native Language and Foreign Language Acquisition (Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 379), pp. 130-137 (1981).

Avoiding repetition: Enough is enough. (By L. Menn & B. MacWhinney.) In C. L. Thew & C. B. Johnson (eds)., Proceedings of the Second International Congress for the Study of Child Language,  vol. 2. Lanham, Md.: University Press of America (1984), pp. 100-111.

Responses to LSA Language Data Archive Survey. (By L. Menn.) Document distributed by the Linguistic Society of America (1987) Pp. 9.

Can grammar be disordered? (By L. Menn.) Colorado Research In Linguistics 9.45-52 (1987).

Development of techniques for comparison of aphasic syndromes in English and Japanese. Technical report, Communication Research Group, Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Gerontology, Fall 1988 (pages unknown).

Aphasic language under discourse pressure: Functional syntax vs. psycholinguistic function. (By L. Menn.)  Studies in the Linguistic Sciences 20:2.109-122 (1990).

Lateralized noun/verb decision: Part of speech, functor context, and two models of the concreteness effect. (By L. Menn, E. Zaidel, & J. Rayman.) Institute for Cognitive Science Technical Report #90-6, U. of Colorado. 1990.

The microstructure of morphological development: Differences across children and across languages. (By A. M. Peters & L. Menn.) Institute for Cognitive Science Technical Report #90-19, U. of Colorado. 1990.

Bunsanshutsu no 'on-line processing' nihongo oyobi eigo ni okeru shitsu gosho: kara no sho:rei. [Online processes of sentence production: Evidence from aphasic speakers of Japanese and English.] (By Y. Morishima, L. Menn, I. Fujita, A. Kamio, and S. Sasanuma.) In Nihon Ninchigakkai Dai 9kai Taikai Happyoronbunshu [Proceedings of 9th annual meeting of the Japan Society for Cognitive Science.pp.106-107. (1992.)

The role of empathy in sentence production: A functional analysis of aphasic and normal elicited narratives in Japanese and English. (By L. Menn, A. Kamio, M. Hayashi, I. Fujita, S. Sasanuma, & L. Boles). CLASNET Working Papers #1, Centre de recherche, Centre hospitalier Cote-des-Neiges, Montreal. 1995.

The interaction of preserved pragmatics and impaired syntax in Japanese and English aphasic speech. (By L. Menn, K.F. Reilly, M. Hayashi, A. Kamio, I. Fujita, and S. Sasanuma.) Institute for Cognitive Science Technical Report #95-2, U. of Colorado. 1995.

A selective preservation of numbers and geographic information in a severe anomic patient: A consequence of degraded visual knowledge base?  (By Gail Ramsberger, Akira Miyake, Lise Menn, Kathleen Reilly, and Christopher M. Filley.)  Institute for Cognitive Science Technical Report #96-4, U. of Colorado. 1996.

Menn, L. The case study in aphasia: methodological and theoretical issues.  (1999) In Nenonen, Marja, and Juhani Järvikivi (eds.).  Languages, Minds, and Brains: Papers from the NorFa Summer Schoold, Mekrijärvi, Finland, June 22-29, 1998.  Studies in Languages 34. University of Joensuu, Faculty of Humanties. Joensuu: Joensuun yliopistopaino. 104-108.

Comparative Aphasiology: Cross-Language Studies of Aphasia. By L. Menn. (2001)  In Vol. 3, Language and Aphasia of the Handbook of Neuropsychology (R.S. Berndt, volume editor; F. Boller and J. Grafman, general editors). Amsterdam: Elsevier Science. Pp. 51-68

Menn, L. (2001) Thirty Years' Perspective on Child Phonology and Phonological Theories: Principled Polydoxy.  In Caroline Féry, Antony Dubach Green & Ruben van de Vijver (eds.),Proceedings of HILP5, University of Potsdam.

Buck-Gengler, C. J., L. Menn, & A. Healy (2001), Mice trap: a new explanation for irregular plurals in noun-noun compounds. Proceedings of the Annual meeting of the Cognitive Science Society, Edinburgh,  August 2001.

Language production in Japanese preschoolers with Specific Language Impairment: Testing theories. Y. Tanaka-Welty, J. Watanabe, & L. Menn. (2002). In E. Fava, (ed.) Clinical Linguistics: Theory and applications in speech pathology and therapy.  Amsterdam: Benjamins, pp. 175-193.

Gahl, Susanne, Menn, Lise, Ramsberger, Gail, Jurafsky, Daniel S., Elder, Elizabeth, Rewega, Molly, & Audrey L. Holland. 2003. Syntactic frame and verb bias in aphasia: Plausibility judgments of undergoer-subject sentences. Brain and Cognition, 53: 223-228.

Buck-Gengler, Lise Menn, & Alice Healy. What "Mice Trap" Tells Us about the Mental Lexicon. Brain and Language 90:453-464 (2004) Special Issue on the Mental Lexicon.

Menn, L. and Yumiko Tanaka-Welty. Developing methods for analyzing language deficiencies in narratives. Special Issue, Japanese Journal of Communication Disorders (Vol.22 No.2, 2005).

Aphasic Errors in Expressing Location: Implications for Production Models. 2007. Lise Menn & Michael Gottfried, in The State of the Art in Speech Error Research: Proceedings of the LSA Institute Workshop, ed. Carson T. Schütze & Victor S. Ferreira.  MIT Working Papers in Linguistics 53:305-351

 

4. Book reviews, abstracts, commentaries, notes, and encyclopedia articles published:

Review of S. E. Blache, The Acquisition of Distinctive Features. (By L. Menn.) Language 57.953-958 (1981).

Review of A. Ziajka, Prelinguistic Communication in Infancy.  (By L. Menn.)  Contemporary Psychology 27.553-554 (1982).

Review of P. Grunwell, The nature of phonological disability in children.  (By L. Menn.) Journal of Child Language 10.479-484 (1983).

Review of M. L. Edwards & L. D. Shriberg, Phonology: Applications in Communicative Disorders.  (By L. Menn.) Applied Psycholinguistics 5.284-285 (1984).

Book notice on J. V. Irwin & S. P. Wong, Phonological development in children.  (By L. Menn.) Language 60.686-687 (1984).

Book notice on W. Bright (ed.), Discovered Tongues; E. Rando & D. J. Napoli (eds.), Meliglossa.  (By L. Menn.) Language 60.690-691 (1984).

Book notice on C. Painter, Into the Mother Tongue. (By L. Menn.) Language 62.729-30 (1986).

Review of M. Paradis, H. Hagiwara, & N. Hildebrandt, Neurolinguistic Aspects of the Japanese Writing System. (By M. P. Lorch, J. Katsuki-Nakamura, S. Sasanuma, & L. Menn.) Language 63.910-915 (1987).

Acquisition of Language: Phonology. Article in International Encyclopedia of Linguistics. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 12-16 (1992).

Book notice on N. Krasnegor, Duane M. Rumbaugh, R.L. Schiefelbusch, & M. Studdert-Kennedy (eds.), Biological and Behavioral Determinants of Language Development. (By L. Menn.) Language 69.629-630 (1993).

Child Phonology: Acquisition of Phonemes.  (By L. Menn and C. Stoel-Gammon.) In The Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics. Oxford: Pergamon Press. pp. 510-511. (1994)

Child Phonology: Prosodic and Autosegmental Theories. (1994) (By L. Menn.) In The Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics. Oxford: Pergamon Press. pp. 511-512.

Review of Lesser & Milroy, Linguistics and Aphasia.  (By L. Menn.) Language in Society  25: 331-332.  (1996)

Constructions in syntax and canonical forms in phonology (Commentary on M. Tomasello, The Return of Constructions) (By. L. Menn). Journal of Child Language 25.2.466-470.  (1998)

A multi-modal, emergent view of the development of syllables in early phonology (Commentary on P. MacNeilage, The frame/content theory of evolution of speech production) (By L. Menn). Behavioural and Brain Sciences 21.4, 523-424. (1998)

Obituary notice for Charles A. Ferguson.  By L. Menn, W. Bright, and K. Barhoum.  Language 75:781-800. (1999)

Babies, Buzzsaws, and Blueprints. By L. Menn. Commentary on Sabbagh & Gelman. Journal of Child Language. 2000.

History and Methods of Comparative Aphasiology. By L. Menn. Finnish Journal of Logopedics and Phoniatrics 2000, Vol. 20, no. 1.

Commentary on 'Filler Syllables: What is Their Status in Emerging Grammar?' by Ann Peters. By L. Menn & A. Feldman. 2001. J. of Child Language 28, 269-271.

Review of M. Paradis, Manifestations of Aphasia Symptoms in Different Languages; Linguistics Vol. 41.6, 2003.

Comparative Aphasiology. By L. Menn. 2003.  In Ray Kent (Ed.), MIT Encyclopedia of Communication Disorders.  Cambridge MA: MIT Press.

Neurolinguistics (Overview); Comparative Aphasiology. L. Menn. 2003. In Wm. Frawley (Ed.) Oxford International Encyclopedia of Linguistics.  New York: Oxford University Press.

Primary Progressive Aphasia in a Bilingual Woman. Christopher M. Filley, Gail Ramsberger, Lise Menn, Jiang Wu, Bessie Y. Reid, & Allen L. Reid. Colorado Research in Linguistics (on-line), vol. 19, 2006.

Review of Nicole Müller (ed.), Multilayered transcription.  Journal of the International Phonetic Association, Vol. 38(1), 2008.

 

5. Other publications:

Guest editor:

Special Issue of Aphasiology on Comparative Aphasiology. L. Menn, Guest Editor. Vol. 10, No. 6 (August-September 1996).

 

Non-Print Media:

Satellite broadcast/videotaped "Telerounds", tutorial/research report entitled 'Pragmatics, Syntax, and Aphasia', 15 December 1995. Distributed to over 100 sites by the National Center for Neurogenic Communication Disorders, U. of Arizona; available on videotape.

 

Shirley Says: Living with Aphasia. By Shirley Kleinman with Lise Menn. Posted December 1999 at http://spot.colorado.edu/~menn/Shirley4.pdf. Japanese translation posted 2001 at http://www.bayget.com/inpaku/kinen9.htm.

 

Articles in press:

Child language, aphasia, and general linguistics, in Crosslinguistic Approaches to the Psychology of Language: Research in the Traditions of Dan Slobin. E. Lieven & J. Guo, Eds., Erlbaum.

 

Cross-linguistic Perspectives on the Syntax and Semantics of Language Disorders. Martha Crago, Johanne Paradis, & Lise Menn, in The Handbook of Clinical Linguistics, ed. M. J. Ball, M. Perkins, N. Müller & S. Howard. Oxford: Blackwell.

 

 

6. Papers presented:           

A theoretical framework for child phonology. Summer meeting, Linguistic Society of America, 1974.

The roles of rules in generative phonology (with R. Wilbur). Summer meeting, Linguistic Society of America, 1974.

Semantics of intonation contour in late babble and beginning speech (English). Summer meeting, Linguistic Society of America, 1976.

Parental awareness of child phonology. Annual meeting, Linguistic Society of America, 1977.

Demonstration of cognitive test materials for the blind. Psychology Research Colloquium, Veterans Administration Medical Center, Boston, Dec. 1978.

Time-course of fundamental frequency variations in parent-child discourse (with S. Boyce). Annual Meeting, Linguistic Society of America, 1978.

Child phonology as a source of constraints on linguistic theory. Annual meeting, Linguistic Society of America, 1979.

Invited presentation on panel, Recent Research in Language Acquisition, MIT Center for Cognitive Science, January 1981.

Linguistic theory and the non-ideal speaker/hearer. Invited talk at Purdue University, at UCLA, and at USC, March 1981.

Invited discussion of presentation on Prosody in mother-infant communication, New England Child Language Association, March 1981.

Invited discussion of panel on prosody, Stanford Child Language Research Forum, March 1981.

Contrasting cases of Italian agrammatic aphasia, Case I (with G. Miceli & H. Goodglass). BABBLE Conference, Niagara Falls, Ontario, March 1981.

Contrasting cases of Italian agrammatic aphasia, Case II (with A. Mazzucchi & H. Goodglass).  BABBLE Conference, Niagara Falls, Ontario, March 1981.

Morphological processing in children and adults. Psychology Research Colloquium, Boston Veterans Administration Medical Center, July 1981.

Current Studies in Agrammatism, Psycholinguistics/Language Behavior Seminar, Boston University, October 1981.

A psycholinguistic model for paragrammatic speech (with J. Powelson, G. Miceli, E. Williams, & E. Zurif). BABBLE Conference, Niagara Falls, Ont., March 1982.

Conduit d'approche in conduction aphasia (with S. Kohn). BABBLE Conference, Niagara Falls, Ont., March 1982.

A consumer's guide to current aphasia research. Invited talk, New Hampshire Speech, Language, and Hearing Association, April 1982.

Organizer, Panel on Careers for Linguists, Linguistic Institute of the Linguistic Society of America, UCLA, June 1983.

Child language, aphasia, and phonotactic universals. Speech Communication Group, Research Laboratory of Electronics, MIT, March 1983; Linguistics Department Colloquium, UCLA, December 1983.

Cross-linguistic approaches to the study of agrammatic aphasia. Psycholinguistics Group, UCLA, November 1983; Salk Institute, La Jolla, December 1983; University of California/Riverside, March 1984; Purdue University, March 1984; University of Maryland, April 1984.

When is a grammatical disorder a disorder of grammar? Invited, Symposium on Clinical Linguistics, Linguistic Society of America and American Association for Applied Linguistics, Baltimore, Dec. 1984.

Recent work from the Cross-Language Aphasia Study, presented at the University of Colorado, March 1985, and at the monthly meeting of the Chicago Linguistic Society, April 1985.

Invited discussant, meeting on Grammatical Processing in Aphasia: Cross-Linguistic Studies, at l'Abbaye de Royaumont, Asnières-sur-Oise, France, March 1985.

A study of agrammatic aphasia in Japanese. Invited paper, Conference on Japanese Language and Linguistics, UCLA, May 1985.

Findings of the cross-language aphasia study. Academy of Aphasia, Pittsburgh, October 1985 (with L.K. Obler); and Washington Linguistics Circle, Georgetown University, April 1986.

Can a grammar be disordered? Program in Speech and Hearing Sciences, CUNY, April 1986.

Organization and presentation of workshop: The acquisition of phonology, Stanford Child Language Research Forum, April 1986.

Phonology of parents' speech to young children, Vanderbilt University, October 1986.

Organization of and presentation at mini-symposium on Life and work of Margaret Bullowa, Annual Meeting of the Linguistic Society of America, December 1986.

Can grammar be disordered?, Meeting on Research in Cognition, Institute of Cognitive Science, U. of Colorado, Feb. 1987.

Invited participation, Workshop on Lexical and Phonological Development, Stanford Child Language Research Forum, April 1987.

Problems of defining 'acquisition' of a morpheme (with Ann Peters). Midwest Conference on Child Phonology, U. of Nebraska, May 1987.

Theoretical issues in phonological development: Invited paper, Symposium on Research in Child Language Disorders, University of Wisconsin/ Madison, May 1987.

Invited speech, Seminar for Japanese Special Educators, Dept. of Communication Disorders and Speech Science, U. of Colorado, August 1987.

Function of intonation contour in the transition from babble to speech, Invited talk, Panel on Pre-Speech, Boston University Conference on Language Development, October 1987.

Cross-linguistic aphasia research and the speech pathologist. Kansai Speech Pathology Association, Kobe, Japan, July 1988.

Cross-linguistic aphasia research. Institute of Logopedics and Phoniatrics, Tokyo, Japan, July 1988.

Comparative aphasiology: Agrammatism in Japanese and English. Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Gerontology, Tokyo, Japan, July 1988.

Problems of creating a theory of aphasia. Keio University Linguistics Colloquium, Mita Campus, Tokyo, Japan, July 1988.

Effects of part of speech, length, concreteness, and emotionality on hemispheric lexical decision (with E. Zaidel & Z. Eviatar). Academy of Aphasia, Montreal, October 1988.

Results in aphasia; or, Articles, particles, and the structure of mind. Invited colloquium, Swarthmore College, November 1988.

A connectionist approach to the question of the right hemisphere lexicon. Institute for Cognitive Science, University of Colorado, Dec. 1988.

Modeling the "concreteness effect" even without a right hemisphere lexicon. Linguistic Society of America, Annual Meeting, New Orleans, Dec. 1988.

The two-lexicon model for child phonology revisited (with E. Matthei). Child Phonology Conference, Northwestern University, May 1989.

Organization and discussion, Session on Theoretical Models, International Conference on Phonological Development, Stanford, Sept. 1989.

Using the Communicative Effectiveness Measure. Presentation to the Speech Pathology Department, Denver Veterans' Administration Medical Center. October 25, 1989.

Findings of the Cross-Linguistic Aphasia Study, Phase I. University of New Mexico, Nov. 1989.

"Bootstrapping" into Morphology? (with Ann Peters)  Child Phonology Conference, University of Wisconsin, May 1990.

Is Learning Language Like Learning Anything Else? Converging on Cognition Colloquium, Institute for Cognitive Science, University of Colorado/ Boulder, October 1990.

From phonology to morphology: A dead end and a fresh start (with Ann Peters). 5th Congress, International Association for the Study of Child Language, Budapest, July 1990. Also presented to Department of Communicative Disorders, University of Illinois/Urbana-Champaign, October 1990; Singapore Association for Applied Linguistics, June 1991.

Aphasic language under discourse pressure: Functional syntax vs. psycholinguistic function. 25th Anniversary Invited Lecture Series, Linguistics Department, University of Illinois/Urbana-Champaign, October 1990.  Also presented as Department Colloquium, U. of Colorado, Oct. 1990; and (with updates) to Speech Rehabilitation Department, Boulder Community Hospital, Nov. 1991; University of Kobe, April 1991; Japan Association of Speech Therapists (Kansai Section), April 1991; Japan Association of Speech Therapists (Kanto Section) May 1991; University of Hokkaido June, 1991; Linguistic Society of Hong Kong, June 1991.

Empathy, Animacy, Topicality, and the Retrieval of Syntax: Evidence from Japanese and English Aphasia. (By L. Menn, I. Fujita, Y. Morishima, A. Kamio, and S. Sasanuma.) Annual Meeting of the Academy of Aphasia, Rome, October 1991.

Functional syntax and aphasic speech: Comparison of Japanese and English. Invited colloquium, Boston University Applied Linguistics Colloquium, February 3, 1992.

Bunsanshutsu no 'on-line processing' nihongo oyobi eigo ni okeru shutsu gosho: kara no sho:rei. [Online processes of sentence production: Evidence from aphasic speakers of Japanese and English.] (By Y. Morishima, L. Menn, I. Fujita, A. Kamio, and S. Sasanuma.) 9th annual meeting of the Japan Society for Cognitive Science, 16-18 May, 1992. 

Connectionist modeling and the microstructure of phonological development: A progress report. (By L. Menn, K. L. Markey, M. Mozer, & C. Lewis.)  Invited presentation, NATO Advanced Research Workshop on Changes in Speech and Face Processing in Infancy, Carry-le-Rouet, France, July 1992.

Sentence perspective in normal and aphasic English and Japanese: Implications for models of sentence formulation. (By L. Menn, M. Hayashi, A. Kamio, I. Fujita, L. Boles, Y. Morishima, & S. Sasanuma.) TENNET (Theoretical and Experimental Neuropsychology) meeting, Montreal, May 1993.

Phonological Toeholds on Morphology: (At Least Two) Ways to Acquire Grammatical Morphemes. Colloquium Series, Linguistics Department and Cognitive Science Program, University of Arizona, October 1993.

Cross-Language Studies of Aphasia.  McDonnell Pew Center for Neuroscience, U. of California San Diego, April 1994.

A developmental model of the sensorimotor foundations of child phonology. (By Kevin L. Markey, Lise Menn, and Michael C. Mozer.) Paper read at the Boston U. Conference on Language Development, November 1994.

A consumer's guide to phonological theories.  Invited panel presentation, American Speech-Language-Hearing Assn., New Orleans, November 1994.

Cognitive factors in the choice of syntactic form by aphasic and normal speakers of English and Japanese: The speaker's impulse. By L. Menn, K.F. Reilly, and M. Hayashi. Paper read at the Linguistic Society of America meeting, New Orleans, January 1995.

Interaction of pragmatics and syntax in aphasic speech. Working conference on New Methods in Comparative Aphasiology, University of New Mexico, June 1995. Also presented at University of Arizona, Tucson, September 1995.

Empathy and schema in choice of syntactic form: experimental studies. By L. Menn and A. Kamio.  International Conference on Functional Approaches to Grammar, University of New Mexico, July 1995. 

Evidence Children Use: Learnability and the Acquisition of Morphology, Invited presentation, Berkeley Linguistic Society, February 17-19, 1996.  In BLS '96. Also presented at Linguistics Department Seminar, University of Hawaii, 13 February.

Cross-linguistic study of language acquisition: Why and how to do it.  Mejiro Linguistic Society, 20 April 1996

Cross-linguistic studies of aphasia: Why and how.  International University of Health and Welfare, Ohtawara, 24 April 1996.  Also presented at 6 May, College of Foreign Languages, Beijing Language and Culture University; 8 May, Institute of Linguistics, National Chung Cheng University, Chia-yi, Taiwan; 9 May, Tsing-Hua University, Hsin-chu; 10 May, National Taiwan University, Taipei; 17 May, University of Hong  Kong.

Towards an experimental functional linguistics. College of Foreign Languages, Beijing Language and Culture University, 6 May 1996

Right-hemisphere lexicon: Two models, no answers. 5 June 1996, Melbourne University, Australia

Phonological toeholds on the acquisition of morphology 6 June 1996, Latrobe University, Melbourne, Australia

The interaction of pragmatics and syntax in aphasic speech 7 June 1996, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia

Role of cross-linguistic psycholinguistic studies in aphasia 11 June 1996, U. of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia

Permeable modules: On evolving and acquiring language-specific capacities.  (L. Menn & A. Peters) 16 July 1996, International Association for the Study of Child Language, Istanbul (refereed) 

Normal and aphasic responses to expectedness in encoding spatial relations. 31 July, 1996, Psychological Laboratory, University of Turku, Finland.

The real-time accessibility of grammatical morphemes: Mice-eaters, alumni relations, and The El Alhambra Motel. 5  August, 1996, International Association for Applied Linguistics, Jyväskylä, Finland (invited keynote talk for refereed session) 

Pragmatic effects on locative encoding in aphasic and normal speech.  Menn, L., A.L. Holland, M. Gottfried, & M.F. Garrett.  Poster presented at Annual Meeting of the Linguistic Society of America, Chicago, Jan. 1997. (refereed)

The language instinct isn't: Better ways to think about children's language acquisition. Institute for Cognitive Science, U. of Colorado, 31 Jan. 1997.

Studying the relation between pragmatics and syntax in aphasia. Neuroscience Research Group, U. of Denver, 12 Feb. 1997.

Experimental and text: Panel on Language and Space, Conference on Conceptual Structure in Discourse and Language, U. of Colorado, 26 May 1997.

Argument-Structure and Aphasic Repetition. (Michael Gottfried, Lise Menn, and Audrey L. Holland) Poster presented at the Academy of Aphasia, October 1997.

Do aphasics have problems with unaccusatives? Presentation at Laboratoire Theophile-Alajouanine, U. of Montreal, April 16, 1998.

Expression of location in aphasic and normal speakers: Pragmatic experiments and semantic implications. Presentation, Linguistics Department, McGill U., April 16, 1998.

Linguistics and interdisciplinary initiatives at Colorado: Working and networking.  To be presented at symposium "The linguistic sciences in a changing context", October 31, 1998. University of Illinois, Urbana.

The Linguistic sciences and neurolinguistics.  Presented at symposium "The linguistic sciences in a changing context", October 31, 1998. University of Illinois, Urbana.

Agrammatic aphasia. Special session honoring Harold Goodglass, Academy of Aphasia, Albuquerque, 2 November 1998.

Methods of Studying Language Production: In the beginning was the wug. Applied Linguistics Forum, Annual meeting of CO-TESOL, 12 November 1998.

Neurolinguistics, 'Future of Linguistics' panel, Annual Meeting, Linguistic Society of America, Jan. 8 1999.

Discussant, Panel "Filler Syllables from Developmental and Functional Perspectives"  International Association for the Study of Child Language, San Sebastian, Spain. 14 July 1999.

Exploring alternatives to innate level-ordering of morphology: The *cookies jar and the mice-catcher. Talk presented at Max Planck Institute, Leipzig, Nov 23; at Max Planck Institute, Nijmegen, Nov. 25, 1999; at Swarthmore College, April 14, 2000; at UCLA,  May 16, 2000.

Tanaka Welty, Y., Watanabe, J., and Menn, L. Japanese Preschooler Children With Specific Language Impairment (?): A preliminary exploration of language characteristics.   Poster  presented at 21st Annual Symposium on Research in Child Language Disorders. June 1-3, 2000, Madison, WI.

Tanaka Welty, Y., Watanabe, J., and Menn, L. An exploratory study on production in Japanese preschoolers with Specific Language Impairment. Conference on Linguistic Theory, Speech Language Pathology, and Speech  Therapy.  Padova, Aug 22-26, 2000.

Tanaka Welty, Y., Watanabe, J., and Menn, L. Grammatical Comprehension in Japanese Preschoolers With Specific Language Impairment.  Poster presented at ASHA 2000, November 19-22, Washington DC.

Hayashi, M., Menn, L. and Ramsberger, G. Sharing Responsibility for Checking Information: A Key to Transmission of Information in Conversation. Poster presented at the Academy of Aphasia, Oct 22-24, Montreal. 2000

Menn, L., What should a theory of child phonology be about?  Holland Institute of Linguistics – Phonology – 5, Potsdam, Jan 11-13, 2000.

Gahl, Susanne, Menn, Lise, Ramsberger, Gail,  Jurafsky, Daniel S., Elder, Elizabeth, Rewega, Molly, & Audrey L. Holland. Syntactic frame and verb bias in aphasia: Plausibility judgments of undergoer-subject sentences. TENNET, Montreal, June 2001 (not delivered; abstract published).

Menn, L. Experimental Methods and Linguistic Theories. Invited presentation, First International Conference on Formal Linguistics. Changsha,  Hunan, China, 9 June 2001.

Tanaka-Welty, Yumiko, Watanabe, Jun, & L. Menn. Identification of A Linguistic  Marker for Japanese Preschoolers with Specific Language Impairment: A discriminant function analysis. Presented at 22nd Annual Symposium on Research in Child Language Disorders, Madison, June 2001.

Tanaka-Welty, Yumiko, Watanabe, Jun, & L. Menn. Comprehension of Japanese Basic Morphosyntax: A comparison of preschoolers with SLI and Mental Retardation.  Presented at ASHA, New Orleans, November 2001.

Menn, L. Syntax and Pragmatics: Using Syntactic Structures in Appropriate Contexts. Invited presentation, 28th Annual Conference of Japanese Assn. of Speech, Language, and Hearing, Workshop on Aphasia. Tokyo, June 21, 2002; Workshop on Aphasia, Osaka, June 25, 2002; also presented at Laboratory for Cognitive Neuropsychology, National Yang Ming University, Taipei, June 28, 2002.

Menn, L. New Ideas in Language Acquisition Studies:  What Do Children Learn Before They Learn Rules? Invited presentation, 28th Annual Conference of Japanese Assn. of Speech, Language, and Hearing, Tokyo, June 22, 2002; also presented at Laboratory for Cognitive Neuropsychology, National Yang Ming University, Taipei, June 28, 2002.

Tanaka-Welty, Yumiko, Watanabe, Jun, & L. Menn. Language Processing Overload: Evidence from Japanese SLI Children. Joint meeting, Symposium on Research in Child Language Disorders and International Congress for the Study of Child Language. Madison, Wisconsin, July 15-20, 2002.

Buck-Gengler, C..J., Menn, L. and Healy, A. What "Mice Trap" tells us about the mental lexicon.  Third International Conference on the Mental Lexicon. Banff, Alberta, Canada, October 6-8, 2002.

Menn, L.  Verbs and argument structures in aphasic comprehension.  University of Hawaii colloquium, Feb 4, 2003.

Menn, L.  Co-constructing Lucy.  University of Queensland, Brisbane, 11 April; Macquarie University, Sydney, 2 May, 2003.

Menn, L.  Towards an experimental functional syntax: the effects of empathy and expectedness. Given at Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan, February 15; National Chiao Tung University, Hsinchu, Taiwan, Feb 26; and University of New South Wales, Sydney, April 30, 2003.

Menn, L.  Specific Language Impairment in Japanese. Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia, 2 May, 2003.

Menn, L. & C. Yoshinaga-Itano. Delayed transition from babble to speech in children with hearing loss. Poster presented at Child Phonology Conference, Vancouver, July 2-3, 2003.

Yoshinaga-Itano, C. & L. Menn. Lexical sign language bootstrap to spoken English phonology. Poster presented at Child Phonology Conference, Vancouver, July 2-3, 2003.

Wallace, V., L. Menn, & C. Yoshinaga-Itano. A Three-Path Model of Spoken Language Acquisition. Presented at Child Phonology Conference, Vancouver, July 2-3, 2003.

Menn, L., S. Gahl, A.L. Holland, G. Ramsberger, & D.S. Jurafsky.  Beyond canonical form: Verb-frame frequency affects verb production and comprehension Academy of Aphasia, Vienna, October 20-22, 2003.  Abstract published in Brain and Language 87, 23-24.

Menn, L. & C. Yoshinaga-Itano. Persisting 'jargon' prespeech in deaf children of hearing parents. Paper presented at annual meeting, Linguistic Society of America, Jan 8-11, 2004.

Experimental functional linguistics as a tool for clinical neurolinguistics. University of Hong Kong, July 21, 2004

Developing methods for analyzing deficiencies in narratives: What should we count?  Sophia University, Tokyo, July 25, 2004

Cross-Linguistic Studies of Aphasia: Where now?  Invited keynote address, Science of Aphasia 5, Potsdam, September, 2004

Tanaka-Welty & Menn. Language Processing Overload: Evidence from sentence comprehension of Japanese SLI children. Poster, International Association for the Study of Child Language, Berlin, July 28, 2005.

Menn, L. & M. Gottfried. Aphasic errors in expressing location: Implications for production models. Poster, LSA Summer Institute workshop on The State of the Art in Speech Error Research. Cambridge MA, July 30, 2005.

Lai, Vicky, Tim Curran, & Lise Menn. The Comprehension of Conventional and Novel Metaphors: An ERP Study. 13th Annual Conference on Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing (AMLaP 13), Turku, Finland, Aug 24-27, 2007.

Menn, L. Invited workshop, 'The problems of analyzing aphasic speech errors'. 8th International Congress of International Society of Applied Psycholinguistics, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil, November 20, 2007.

Menn, L. Invited plenary address 'Experimental studies of aphasic speech production'. 8th International Congress of International Society of Applied Psycholinguistics, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Brazil, November 22, 2007.

Menn, L. Invited plenary keynote address, 'Phones, Phonemes, and Phonotactics: Similarities and Differences Between L1 and L2'.  New Sounds (an international conference on second language phonetics and phonology), Federal University of Santa Catarina, Florianopolis, Brazil, November 25, 2007.

Menn, L. Before her stroke, she wrote poetry in two languages: Understanding aphasia in bilingual speakers. 2008 Barbara Gordon Lecture, Florida International University, Miami. 20 Feb 2008.

Menn, L. Doing cross-linguistic studies of aphasia. Invited talk, Florida International University, Miami. 20 Feb 2008.

Menn, L. From mysticism to mechanism in child phonology: Getting closer to a psycholinguistically plausible model of phonological development.  Presented at U.C. Berkeley Linguistics Department 14 April 2008; at SPLaT! (Stanford Psycholinguistics series) 17 April 2008.

 

 

 

7. Presentations scheduled:

From mysticism to mechanism in child phonology: Getting closer to a psycholinguistically plausible model of phonological development.  Brussels, Oct. 16, 2008; Amsterdam, Oct. 17, 2008; York, Oct 29, 2008.

 

Short course (five 90-min lectures): The art of analyzing aphasic language production. University of Åbo, Finland, Oct 22-24, 2008.

 

Short course (eight 2hr lectures): Materials and method for teaching psycholinguistics. Federal University of Santa Catarina, Florianópolis SC, Brazil.

Nov.-Dec 2008.

 

 

B. Honors

            Fellow, Linguistic Society of America, elected 2006

 

C. Grant Support:

University-Internal:

Committee on University Scholarly Publications, $3000 in support of publication of Agrammatic Aphasia.

Instructional Grant Program, $5500, to create computerized language data base (with Prof. Barbara Fox).

Council on Research and Creative Work, $405, "Pilot work for aphasic syntax proposal."

Council on Research and Creative Work, $600, "Exploration of the relations between language and cognition: a study of the structure of the human mind."

Council on Research and Creative Work, $600, "Conversation Analysis"

 

External:

NSF Undergraduate Research supplement to "Frequency and Structure in Aphasic Language Production: Data Base and Experimental Studies", $5K, June – Aug 2000.

"Frequency and Structure in Aphasic Language Production: Data Base and Experimental Studies" (L. Menn, D. Jurafsky, G. Ramsberger, A.L. Holland) ($127K) Jan. 2000-Dec. 2002.

"Research Workshop on Development of Morphological Function" (J. Bybee, L. Menn, D. Slobin, R. Berman) ($37K)  Jan.-Dec. 1995.

"New Methods in Comparative Aphasiology" (J. Bybee, L. Menn, L.K. Obler, G. Jarema)  NIH ($33K).Jan.-Dec. 1995.

"Specific Language Impairment and Williams' Syndrome: A Double Dissociation of Language and Cognition?" (J. Bybee, L. Menn,  L.B. Leonard, J.L Patterson). NSF ($30, 277). Jan.-Dec. 1995.

"The Use of Syntax in Japanese and English Aphasic Speech". National Institutes of Health. June 1990-May 1992 ($81,400).

"Experimental studies in aphasic syntax." Japan Society for the Promotion of Science and Japan-U.S. Educational Commission (Fulbright Commission). Host Scientist: Prof. Akio Kamio, Dokkyo University. January-June 1991 (approx. $25,000 ).

Research on Japanese aphasia.  Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Gerontology, Visiting Research Fellowship. Sponsor: Dr. Sumiko Sasanuma. June-July 1988.

"Morphosyntax in aphasics and the two brain hemispheres." National Research Service Award, Senior Postdoctoral Fellowship. Sponsor: Eran Zaidel, Psychology Department, UCLA; August 1983-July 1984. Funded by NIH(NINCDS).

"Working Conference on the Cross-Language Study of Agrammatism."  Loraine K. Obler, co-principal investigator. Funded jointly by NSF and NIH(NINCDS), 1983.

"Working Conference on Exceptional Language and Linguistics."  Loraine K. Obler, co-principal investigator, 1979-80, NSF.

"Role of fundamental frequency in parent-child conversation."  Kenneth N. Stevens, co-principal investigator, 1978-79, NSF.

"Phonological modifications in parents' speech to children."  Kenneth N. Stevens, co-principal investigator, 1977, NSF.

Social Science Research Council Postdoctoral Fellowship.  Sponsor:  Paula Menyuk, Boston University, 1976-77.

 

D. Professional Activities and Service:

Professional

Associate Editor, Aphasiology, 1997 –

Secretary, AAAS Section Z (Linguistics & Language Science), 2005-2009.

External reviewer of symposium proposals and student poster competition judge, AAAS, 2007, 2008

Board of Governors, Academy of Aphasia, 2001-2003.

Editorial Board: Journal of Multilingual Communication Disorders, 2002 -

Local arrangements committee, 2001 meeting, Academy of Aphasia

Delegate from Linguistic Society of America to AAAS Section J, 1999-2002.

AAAS Section Z (Linguistics & Language Science) Nominating Committee, 1998 – 2001, Chair of Nominating Committee, 2000.

Communication Disorders Review Group, Nat'l Inst. of Deafness & Comm. Disord., NIH, 1992-1995.

Associate Director, Linguistic Institute, University of New Mexico, 1995.

Executive Committee, Linguistic Society of America, 1994-1997.

Member-at-Large, Steering Committee, Section Z (Linguistics), AAAS, 1993.

Program Committee, Linguistic Society of America, 1989-1991 and 2007-2009.

Secretary to the Board of Governors, Academy of Aphasia, 1989-1992.

Topic Editor for Neurolinguistics, Oxford International Encyclopedia of Linguistics, 1986-1991; 2nd edition, 2000-2002.

Member, Linguistics Panel, National Science Foundation, 1983-1986.

Associate Editor, Language, Journal of the Linguistic Society of America, 1985-1987.

Member, Linguistic Society of America Ad Hoc Committee on Careers for Linguists, 1983-1987.

Member, Review panel, Society for Research in Child Development, 1979, 1990.

Member, New England Child Language Assn., 1976-present; Chair, Steering Committee, 1976-1979.

Chair, Program Committee, First Annual Boston Univ. Conference on Language Development, 1976.

Program Committee, Boston Univ. Conference on Language Development (about every other year, 1977-1985; 1990, 1992, 1993, 1997, 1999, 2006, 2008).

Program Committee, International Association for the Study of Child Language (triennial meeting), Aug. 1995, Dec. 2007.

Consultant to LSA Program Committee, Sept. 1995, 1997, 1999, 2004.

Satellite broadcast/videotaped "Telerounds", tutorial/research report entitled 'Pragmatics, Syntax, and Aphasia', 15 December 1995. Distributed to over 100 sites by the National Center for Neurogenic Communication Disorders, U. of Arizona.