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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Robert Frank. mw 11.35-12.50 QR (34) Mathematical methods in linguistics. Topics include set theory, logic and formal systems, model theory, lambda calculus, formal language theory, elementary statistics, and probability.
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3.00 Credits
Einar Mencl. t9.25-11.15 (22) Introduction to common techniques and research in cognitive neuroimaging, with applications to the study of language. Techniques include mri acquisition, preprocessing, single- and multisubject data analysis, visualization, and network analysis. Topics include speech production and perception, literacy, and dyslexia.
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3.00 Credits
Maria Pi?ango. mw 2.30-3.45 So (0) The study of language as a cognitive neuroscience. The interaction between linguistic theory and neurological evidence from brain damage, degenerative diseases (e.g., Alzheimer's disease), mental illness (e.g., schizophrenia), neuroimaging, and neurophysiology. The connection of language as a neurocognitive system to other systems such as memory and music.
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3.00 Credits
bG ,Articulatory Phonology
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3.00 Credits
Matthew Wolf. th9.25-11.15 So (0) Theories concerning the morphological nature of the inputs to phonological derivations. Uniqueness vs. nonuniqueness of the underlying forms of morphological elements; simultane ous vs. increme ntal construction of morphologically complex words; relations of similarity and dissimilarity within paradigms. Prerequisite: ling 135b, or with p ermission of i nstructor
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3.00 Credits
bG ,Language Description
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3.00 Credits
Erich Round. m 1.30-3.20 So (0) A critical survey of the facts of Australian language phonologies and their analysis: phonological inventories and phonotactic patterns, their puzzling similarities across the continent, and formal phonological and phonetically based accounts of these; the interface of phonology with morphology; stress systems; patterns of sound change.
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3.00 Credits
Darya Kavitskaya. t 1.30-3.20 So (0) Study of phonological opacity in the world's languages. Survey of the typology of opaque interactions; the relation of opacity and morphology; theoretical approaches to opacity, with emphasis on approaches developed within optimal-ity theory. Prerequisite: ling 135b, or with permission of instructor
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3.00 Credits
Robert Frank.
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3.00 Credits
bG ,Subjects
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