Ruth Ann Atchley,
Associate Professor, Department of Psychology.
Dr. Atchley engages in both psychophysiological and behavioral research
designed to test psycholinguistic theories of language comprehension. More specifically, her work
addresses issues of word comprehension, discourse comprehension, individual differences in language
processing, and verbal creativity.
Ed Auer,
Assistant Professor, Department of Speech-Language-Hearing: Sciences and Disorders.
Dr. Auer's research interests are on the
development and function of uni- and multi-sensory perceptual pattern recognition at cortical,
computational, and behavioral levels of description, with special emphasis on the perception
of spoken language; the cortical and behavioral effects of long-term sensory deprivation,
with special emphasis on deafness; and the measurement, analysis, and synthesis of optical
speech signals.
Steven Barlow, Professor, Department of Speech-Language-Hearing: Sciences and Disorders.
Dr. Barlow's research interests focus on
the neural mechanisms involved in sensorimotor integration among orofacial and vocal tract
structures during speech, vocalization, and oromotor control in infants, children, and adults.
The theoretical underpinnings of neural plasticity associated with activity-dependent change
are currently under investigation in premature infants at-risk for brain injury. At the other
end of the developmental spectrum, electrophysiological and mechanosensory psychophysical
experiments are underway to explore the effects of deep brain stimulator implants on fine
motor control in individuals with advanced forms of Parkinson's disease. Similar methods of
investigation are also being applied to explore salient features of neuromotor and neurosensory
reorganization in children undergoing facial reconstructive surgery due to congenital clefting.
Nancy Brady,
Research Associate Professor, Institute for Life Span Studies.
Dr. Brady is interested in how individuals
learn symbolic communication, including spoken language. Her research has focused on acquisition
of symbolic communication in individuals with developmental disabilities including autism.
In addition, she is studying early pragmatic skills in young children with developmental
disabilities, focusing on negotiations of communication breakdowns.
Hugh W. Catts, Professor and Chair, Department of Speech-Language-Hearing: Sciences and Disorders.
Dr. Catts is interested in the
relationship between oral and written language development/disorders. His current research
focuses on the language basis of reading and writing disabilities. He is also interested
in phonology and its association to written word recognition.
John Colombo,
Professor and Co-Director, Developmental Program, Department of Psychology.
Dr. Colombo's main interests are in early attention and perceptual
development, including early auditory development and speech perception. Additional interests
include the relationship between early auditory discrimination skills and later language
competence. He has developed methods for measuring attention to auditory stimuli and auditory
discrimination in preverbal infants, and his recent research includes studies of those acoustic
parameters that are most salient to infants, as well as of the acoustic components of adult-to-infant
speech.
Marc Fey,
Professor, Department of Hearing and Speech, School of Allied Health, University of Kansas Medical
Center.
Dr. Fey is interested primarily in the assessment and treatment of developmental impairments of
speech and language. His current research involves: (a) assessing the short- and long-term
effects of grammar facilitation approaches; (b) acquisition and development of auxiliary
verbs and related morphosyntax in children developing typically and in children with specific
language impairment, (c) the developmental relationships between early phonological and
grammatical impairments and later problems with written language.
Robert Fiorentino,
Assistant Professor, Department of Linguistics.
Dr. Fiorentino's research concerns the basic nature of linguistic representations and the
operations they undergo, with a major focus on how these ingredients of language are neurally
implemented and recruited in real-time processing. He addresses these issues primarily using
psycholinguistic and neurolinguistic research methods, with an emphasis on the application of
brain imaging techniques such as MEG, EEG, and fMRI to linguistic research. His primary
languages of research are English and Japanese.
Alison Gabriele,
Assistant Professor, Department of Linguistics.
Dr. Gabriele's research focuses on the acquisition of syntax and semantics by second
language learners and bilingual children. Her dissertation research looked at the
acquisition of aspectual morphology by adult learners of English and Japanese. She is
beginning a project that will look at the L2 acquisition of the semantics of bare nominals
by learners of Japanese.
Andrea Follmer Greenhoot, Associate Professor, Department of Psychology.
Dr. Greenhoot's primary interests are in cognitive development, with a special focus on memory
development in children. A central theme in her work is the interplay between memory development
and other aspects of cognitive and social functioning. Her recent research focuses on the
impact of knowledge on recollective processes across development, and the retention of significant
childhood memories into adulthood. Her interests also include statistical methodology, with an
emphasis on techniques for the analysis of developmental change.
Betty Hart, Professor Emeritus.
Dr. Hart is responsible for much of the research that has been published on the effects of
incidental language teaching strategies during the past 15 years. Her current interests
include both the micro- and macro-analysis of the forms, social contexts, and function
of children's spontaneous speech as well as intervention and remediation in nonlaboratory settings.
Allard Jongman,
Professor, Department of Linguistics.
Dr. Jongman conducts detailed acoustic and perceptual analyses of speech signal to understand
the complex interaction between phonetic, phonological, and lexical information. His research
also addresses questions of language learning, particularly the nature of the phonetic
representations in learning a second language, and the way in which these representations
are affected by one's native language categories.
Susan Kemper,
Roy A. Roberts Distinguished Professor, Department of Psychology.
Dr. Kemper has extended the study of language development across the life-span to the analysis
of age-related changes in adults' language. Her analyses of the spoken and written language
of adults 60 to 90 years of age have focused on how subtle impairments of working memory affect
language complexity. She is also involved in ongoing longitudinal studies of linguistic and
cognitive changes in older adults, including adults with dementia and studies of speech
accommodations to older adults.
Diane Frome Loeb,
Associate Professor, Department of Speech-Language-Hearing: Sciences and Disorders.
Dr. Loeb's research has focused on the language abilities of preschoolers and toddlers.
She is currently addressing questions that are concerned with the interrelationship between
and within the language system. These include evaluating the relationship between syntactic
categories and between the syntactic, semantic, pragmatic, and phonological properties
of language. Dr. Loeb's current interests also include the application of theoretical
frameworks to normal and disordered populations and intervention efficacy issues.
Kathleen McCluskey-Fawcett, Senior Vice Provost of Academic Affairs and Professor,
Department of Psychology.
Dr. McCluskey-Fawcett's research interests are primarily in the area of infancy. She is
interested in the social interaction between infants and parents, and has done some
research about the communication patterns between young children and their parents.
She is also interested in adolescent pregnancy and parenting and is currently conducting
research on this topic.
Clifton Pye, Associate Professor,
Department of Linguistics.
Dr. Pye is interested in the acquisition of Native American languages and its implications
for linguistic theory, language development, and language loss. His primary focus is the
acquisition of verb argument structure and its connection to semantic development. His other
interests include Mayan and Mixe-Zoquean linguistics, lexical meaning, language processing,
and computational linguistics.
Mabel Rice,
The Fred and Virginia Merrill Professor of Advanced Studies, Director of the Child Language
Doctoral Program, and Director of the Biobehavioral Neurosciences in Communications Disorders Center.
Dr. Rice is interested in the grammatical impairments of children with specific language
impairments, and the etiology of the impairments. She also carries out studies of lexical
acquisition, social consequences of language impairment, classroom-based preschool intervention,
and language outcomes of high-risk infants.
Sara Thomas Rosen,
Professor and Chair, Department of Linguistics.
Dr. Rosen's primary research is in the relation among the various levels of syntactic
representation. Her current work focuses on the representation and mapping relations of
the argument structure and event structure of predicates, both simplex and complex,
and on the contributions of the lexicon and the phrasal syntax to semantic interpretation.
She is also interested in issues of learnability and of discerning linguistic knowledge
in the acquisition of language.
Richard L. Schiefelbusch, Professor Emeritus.
Dr. Schiefelbusch has been primarily concerned with the translation of research on language
acquisition and remediation into therapeutic practice. He has been responsible for much
of the conceptual work which has led to the development of the "field of language
remediation" and in the design of comprehensive systems of language intervention.
Joan Sereno,
Associate Professor, Department of Linguistics.
Dr. Sereno is a psycholinguist whose research focuses on the access and representation
of linguistic knowledge. Her research examines how language is processed both at the
perceptual level as well as at higher morphological and lexical levels, with a goal of
relating these data to specific brain processes. Dr. Sereno has also examined speech patterns
in first language acquisition and more recently has investigated language processing in second
language learners.
Gregory B. Simpson, Professor and Chair, Department of Psychology.
Dr. Simpson's research focuses on basic processes underlying reading and learning to read.
Much of his work has been concerned with the processes by which readers use context to
assist word identification. In particular, this research examines the effects of context
on the activation, selection, and suppression of meanings of ambiguous words. Recently,
he has begun research on word recognition processes in Korean, a language that uses two scripts.
Holly L. Storkel,
Associate Professor, Department of Speech-Language-Hearing: Sciences and Disorders.
Dr. Storkel's research focuses on how children build a lexicon by examining the acquisition,
organization, and processing of words. The primary goal is to bring converging evidence
to bear on the mutual influence of phonological and lexical development in normal and
clinical populations of preschool children.
Michael Vitevitch,
Associate Professor, Department of Psychology.
Dr. Vitevitch is interested in the processes and representations that are used to retrieve
information quickly and accurately from the lexicon. Much of his work has examined the
influence of phonological "neighbors," or similar sounding words, and
sub-lexical information, such as phonotactic probability, on the production and
comprehension of speech.
Steven F. Warren,
Professor of Applied Behavioral Sciences and Director of the
Schiefelbusch Institute for Life Span Studies.
Dr. Warren is interested in early communication and language development and interventio
in young children with developmental delays. His current work is primarily focused on
the effects of prelinguistic communication intervention on later language development.
He is also interested in how language develops in children with specific etiologies
such as Down syndrome and Fragile-X syndrome.